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[bpt/emacs.git] / doc / lispintro / emacs-lisp-intro.texi
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1\input texinfo @c -*-texinfo-*-
2@comment %**start of header
fb3dc846 3@setfilename ../../info/eintr
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4@c setfilename emacs-lisp-intro.info
5@c sethtmlfilename emacs-lisp-intro.html
6@settitle Programming in Emacs Lisp
7@syncodeindex vr cp
8@syncodeindex fn cp
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9@finalout
10
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11@include emacsver.texi
12
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13@c ---------
14@c <<<< For hard copy printing, this file is now
15@c set for smallbook, which works for all sizes
7877f373 16@c of paper, and with PostScript figures >>>>
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17@set smallbook
18@ifset smallbook
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19@smallbook
20@clear largebook
a9097c6d 21@end ifset
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22@set print-postscript-figures
23@c set largebook
24@c clear print-postscript-figures
25@c ---------
26
27@comment %**end of header
28
a9097c6d 29@c per rms and peterb, use 10pt fonts for the main text, mostly to
867d4bb3 30@c save on paper cost.
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31@c Do this inside @tex for now, so current makeinfo does not complain.
32@tex
33@ifset smallbook
34@fonttextsize 10
6e3da0ae 35
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36@end ifset
37\global\hbadness=6666 % don't worry about not-too-underfull boxes
38@end tex
39
09b98a01 40@c These refer to the printed book sold by the FSF.
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41@set edition-number 3.10
42@set update-date 28 October 2009
45cf6cbd 43
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44@c ================ Included Figures ================
45
46@c Set print-postscript-figures if you print PostScript figures.
47@c If you clear this, the ten figures will be printed as ASCII diagrams.
48@c (This is not relevant to Info, since Info only handles ASCII.)
49@c Your site may require editing changes to print PostScript; in this
50@c case, search for `print-postscript-figures' and make appropriate changes.
51
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52@c ================ How to Print a Book in Various Sizes ================
53
54@c This book can be printed in any of three different sizes.
55@c In the above header, set @-commands appropriately.
56
57@c 7 by 9.25 inches:
58@c @smallbook
59@c @clear largebook
60
61@c 8.5 by 11 inches:
62@c @c smallbook
63@c @set largebook
64
65@c European A4 size paper:
66@c @c smallbook
67@c @afourpaper
68@c @set largebook
69
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70@c (Note: if you edit the book so as to change the length of the
71@c table of contents, you may have to change the value of `pageno' below.)
72
73@c ================ End of Formatting Sections ================
74
75@c For next or subsequent edition:
76@c create function using with-output-to-temp-buffer
77@c create a major mode, with keymaps
78@c run an asynchronous process, like grep or diff
79
80@c For 8.5 by 11 inch format: do not use such a small amount of
81@c whitespace between paragraphs as smallbook format
82@ifset largebook
83@tex
84\global\parskip 6pt plus 1pt
85@end tex
86@end ifset
87
88@c For all sized formats: print within-book cross
89@c reference with ``...'' rather than [...]
90
91@c This works with the texinfo.tex file, version 2003-05-04.08,
92@c in the Texinfo version 4.6 of the 2003 Jun 13 distribution.
93
94@tex
95\if \xrefprintnodename
96 \global\def\xrefprintnodename#1{\unskip, ``#1''}
97 \else
98 \global\def\xrefprintnodename#1{ ``#1''}
99\fi
100% \global\def\xrefprintnodename#1{, ``#1''}
101@end tex
102
103@c ----------------------------------------------------
104
e979a521 105@dircategory GNU Emacs Lisp
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106@direntry
107* Emacs Lisp Intro: (eintr).
108 A simple introduction to Emacs Lisp programming.
109@end direntry
110
111@copying
112This is an @cite{Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp}, for
113people who are not programmers.
114@sp 1
09b98a01 115@iftex
8cda6f8f 116Edition @value{edition-number}, @value{update-date}
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117@end iftex
118@ifnottex
119Distributed with Emacs version @value{EMACSVER}.
120@end ifnottex
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121@ifset WWW_GNU_ORG
122@html
123<p>The homepage for GNU Emacs is at
124<a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/">http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/</a>.
125<br>To view this manual in other formats, click
126<a href="/software/emacs/emacs-lisp-intro/emacs-lisp-intro.html">here</a>.
127@end html
128@end ifset
8cda6f8f 129@sp 1
ab422c4d 130Copyright @copyright{} 1990--1995, 1997, 2001--2013 Free Software
f99f1641 131Foundation, Inc.
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132@sp 1
133
134@iftex
135Published by the:@*
136
09b98a01 137GNU Press, @hfill @uref{http://www.fsf.org/licensing/gnu-press/}@*
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138a division of the @hfill email: @email{sales@@fsf.org}@*
139Free Software Foundation, Inc. @hfill Tel: +1 (617) 542-5942@*
14051 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor @hfill Fax: +1 (617) 542-2652@*
72ec96fb 141Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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142@end iftex
143
144@ifnottex
09b98a01 145Printed copies available from @uref{http://shop.fsf.org/}. Published by:
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146
147@example
09b98a01 148GNU Press, http://www.fsf.org/licensing/gnu-press/
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149a division of the email: sales@@fsf.org
150Free Software Foundation, Inc. Tel: +1 (617) 542-5942
15151 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor Fax: +1 (617) 542-2652
72ec96fb 152Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
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153@end example
154@end ifnottex
155
156@sp 1
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157ISBN 1-882114-43-4
158
159Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
e41dfb1e 160under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
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161any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; there
162being no Invariant Section, with the Front-Cover Texts being ``A GNU
163Manual'', and with the Back-Cover Texts as in (a) below. A copy of
164the license is included in the section entitled ``GNU Free
165Documentation License''.
166
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167(a) The FSF's Back-Cover Text is: ``You have the freedom to
168copy and modify this GNU manual. Buying copies from the FSF
169supports it in developing GNU and promoting software freedom.''
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170@end copying
171
172@c half title; two lines here, so do not use `shorttitlepage'
173@tex
174{\begingroup%
175 \hbox{}\vskip 1.5in \chaprm \centerline{An Introduction to}%
176 \endgroup}%
177{\begingroup\hbox{}\vskip 0.25in \chaprm%
178 \centerline{Programming in Emacs Lisp}%
179 \endgroup\page\hbox{}\page}
180@end tex
181
182@titlepage
183@sp 6
184@center @titlefont{An Introduction to}
185@sp 2
186@center @titlefont{Programming in Emacs Lisp}
187@sp 2
188@center Revised Third Edition
189@sp 4
190@center by Robert J. Chassell
191
192@page
193@vskip 0pt plus 1filll
194@insertcopying
195@end titlepage
196
197@iftex
198@headings off
199@evenheading @thispage @| @| @thischapter
200@oddheading @thissection @| @| @thispage
201@end iftex
202
203@ifnothtml
204@c Keep T.O.C. short by tightening up for largebook
205@ifset largebook
206@tex
207\global\parskip 2pt plus 1pt
208\global\advance\baselineskip by -1pt
209@end tex
210@end ifset
211@end ifnothtml
212
213@shortcontents
214@contents
215
216@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 217@node Top
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218@top An Introduction to Programming in Emacs Lisp
219
220@insertcopying
221
222This master menu first lists each chapter and index; then it lists
223every node in every chapter.
224@end ifnottex
225
226@c >>>> Set pageno appropriately <<<<
227
228@c The first page of the Preface is a roman numeral; it is the first
229@c right handed page after the Table of Contents; hence the following
230@c setting must be for an odd negative number.
231
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232@c iftex
233@c global@pageno = -11
234@c end iftex
8cda6f8f 235
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236@set COUNT-WORDS count-words-example
237@c Length of variable name chosen so that things still line up when expanded.
238
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239@menu
240* Preface:: What to look for.
241* List Processing:: What is Lisp?
242* Practicing Evaluation:: Running several programs.
243* Writing Defuns:: How to write function definitions.
244* Buffer Walk Through:: Exploring a few buffer-related functions.
245* More Complex:: A few, even more complex functions.
246* Narrowing & Widening:: Restricting your and Emacs attention to
247 a region.
248* car cdr & cons:: Fundamental functions in Lisp.
249* Cutting & Storing Text:: Removing text and saving it.
250* List Implementation:: How lists are implemented in the computer.
251* Yanking:: Pasting stored text.
252* Loops & Recursion:: How to repeat a process.
253* Regexp Search:: Regular expression searches.
254* Counting Words:: A review of repetition and regexps.
255* Words in a defun:: Counting words in a @code{defun}.
256* Readying a Graph:: A prototype graph printing function.
257* Emacs Initialization:: How to write a @file{.emacs} file.
258* Debugging:: How to run the Emacs Lisp debuggers.
259* Conclusion:: Now you have the basics.
260* the-the:: An appendix: how to find reduplicated words.
261* Kill Ring:: An appendix: how the kill ring works.
09e80d9f 262* Full Graph:: How to create a graph with labeled axes.
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263* Free Software and Free Manuals::
264* GNU Free Documentation License::
265* Index::
266* About the Author::
267
268@detailmenu
269 --- The Detailed Node Listing ---
270
271Preface
272
273* Why:: Why learn Emacs Lisp?
274* On Reading this Text:: Read, gain familiarity, pick up habits....
275* Who You Are:: For whom this is written.
276* Lisp History::
277* Note for Novices:: You can read this as a novice.
278* Thank You::
279
280List Processing
281
282* Lisp Lists:: What are lists?
283* Run a Program:: Any list in Lisp is a program ready to run.
284* Making Errors:: Generating an error message.
285* Names & Definitions:: Names of symbols and function definitions.
286* Lisp Interpreter:: What the Lisp interpreter does.
287* Evaluation:: Running a program.
288* Variables:: Returning a value from a variable.
289* Arguments:: Passing information to a function.
290* set & setq:: Setting the value of a variable.
291* Summary:: The major points.
292* Error Message Exercises::
293
294Lisp Lists
295
296* Numbers Lists:: List have numbers, other lists, in them.
297* Lisp Atoms:: Elemental entities.
298* Whitespace in Lists:: Formatting lists to be readable.
299* Typing Lists:: How GNU Emacs helps you type lists.
300
301The Lisp Interpreter
302
303* Complications:: Variables, Special forms, Lists within.
304* Byte Compiling:: Specially processing code for speed.
305
306Evaluation
307
308* How the Interpreter Acts:: Returns and Side Effects...
309* Evaluating Inner Lists:: Lists within lists...
310
311Variables
312
313* fill-column Example::
314* Void Function:: The error message for a symbol
315 without a function.
316* Void Variable:: The error message for a symbol without a value.
317
318Arguments
319
320* Data types:: Types of data passed to a function.
321* Args as Variable or List:: An argument can be the value
322 of a variable or list.
323* Variable Number of Arguments:: Some functions may take a
324 variable number of arguments.
325* Wrong Type of Argument:: Passing an argument of the wrong type
326 to a function.
327* message:: A useful function for sending messages.
328
329Setting the Value of a Variable
330
331* Using set:: Setting values.
332* Using setq:: Setting a quoted value.
333* Counting:: Using @code{setq} to count.
334
335Practicing Evaluation
336
337* How to Evaluate:: Typing editing commands or @kbd{C-x C-e}
338 causes evaluation.
339* Buffer Names:: Buffers and files are different.
340* Getting Buffers:: Getting a buffer itself, not merely its name.
341* Switching Buffers:: How to change to another buffer.
342* Buffer Size & Locations:: Where point is located and the size of
343 the buffer.
344* Evaluation Exercise::
345
346How To Write Function Definitions
347
348* Primitive Functions::
2325c82f 349* defun:: The @code{defun} macro.
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350* Install:: Install a function definition.
351* Interactive:: Making a function interactive.
352* Interactive Options:: Different options for @code{interactive}.
353* Permanent Installation:: Installing code permanently.
354* let:: Creating and initializing local variables.
355* if:: What if?
356* else:: If--then--else expressions.
357* Truth & Falsehood:: What Lisp considers false and true.
358* save-excursion:: Keeping track of point, mark, and buffer.
359* Review::
360* defun Exercises::
361
362Install a Function Definition
363
364* Effect of installation::
365* Change a defun:: How to change a function definition.
366
367Make a Function Interactive
368
369* Interactive multiply-by-seven:: An overview.
370* multiply-by-seven in detail:: The interactive version.
371
372@code{let}
373
374* Prevent confusion::
375* Parts of let Expression::
376* Sample let Expression::
377* Uninitialized let Variables::
378
379The @code{if} Special Form
380
381* if in more detail::
382* type-of-animal in detail:: An example of an @code{if} expression.
383
384Truth and Falsehood in Emacs Lisp
385
386* nil explained:: @code{nil} has two meanings.
387
388@code{save-excursion}
389
390* Point and mark:: A review of various locations.
391* Template for save-excursion::
392
393A Few Buffer--Related Functions
394
395* Finding More:: How to find more information.
396* simplified-beginning-of-buffer:: Shows @code{goto-char},
397 @code{point-min}, and @code{push-mark}.
398* mark-whole-buffer:: Almost the same as @code{beginning-of-buffer}.
399* append-to-buffer:: Uses @code{save-excursion} and
400 @code{insert-buffer-substring}.
401* Buffer Related Review:: Review.
402* Buffer Exercises::
403
404The Definition of @code{mark-whole-buffer}
405
406* mark-whole-buffer overview::
407* Body of mark-whole-buffer:: Only three lines of code.
408
409The Definition of @code{append-to-buffer}
410
411* append-to-buffer overview::
412* append interactive:: A two part interactive expression.
413* append-to-buffer body:: Incorporates a @code{let} expression.
414* append save-excursion:: How the @code{save-excursion} works.
415
416A Few More Complex Functions
417
418* copy-to-buffer:: With @code{set-buffer}, @code{get-buffer-create}.
419* insert-buffer:: Read-only, and with @code{or}.
420* beginning-of-buffer:: Shows @code{goto-char},
421 @code{point-min}, and @code{push-mark}.
422* Second Buffer Related Review::
423* optional Exercise::
424
425The Definition of @code{insert-buffer}
426
427* insert-buffer code::
428* insert-buffer interactive:: When you can read, but not write.
429* insert-buffer body:: The body has an @code{or} and a @code{let}.
430* if & or:: Using an @code{if} instead of an @code{or}.
431* Insert or:: How the @code{or} expression works.
432* Insert let:: Two @code{save-excursion} expressions.
433* New insert-buffer::
434
435The Interactive Expression in @code{insert-buffer}
436
437* Read-only buffer:: When a buffer cannot be modified.
438* b for interactive:: An existing buffer or else its name.
439
440Complete Definition of @code{beginning-of-buffer}
441
442* Optional Arguments::
443* beginning-of-buffer opt arg:: Example with optional argument.
444* beginning-of-buffer complete::
445
446@code{beginning-of-buffer} with an Argument
447
448* Disentangle beginning-of-buffer::
449* Large buffer case::
450* Small buffer case::
451
452Narrowing and Widening
453
454* Narrowing advantages:: The advantages of narrowing
455* save-restriction:: The @code{save-restriction} special form.
456* what-line:: The number of the line that point is on.
457* narrow Exercise::
458
459@code{car}, @code{cdr}, @code{cons}: Fundamental Functions
460
461* Strange Names:: An historical aside: why the strange names?
462* car & cdr:: Functions for extracting part of a list.
463* cons:: Constructing a list.
464* nthcdr:: Calling @code{cdr} repeatedly.
465* nth::
466* setcar:: Changing the first element of a list.
467* setcdr:: Changing the rest of a list.
468* cons Exercise::
469
470@code{cons}
471
472* Build a list::
473* length:: How to find the length of a list.
474
475Cutting and Storing Text
476
477* Storing Text:: Text is stored in a list.
478* zap-to-char:: Cutting out text up to a character.
479* kill-region:: Cutting text out of a region.
480* copy-region-as-kill:: A definition for copying text.
481* Digression into C:: Minor note on C programming language macros.
482* defvar:: How to give a variable an initial value.
483* cons & search-fwd Review::
484* search Exercises::
485
486@code{zap-to-char}
487
488* Complete zap-to-char:: The complete implementation.
489* zap-to-char interactive:: A three part interactive expression.
490* zap-to-char body:: A short overview.
491* search-forward:: How to search for a string.
492* progn:: The @code{progn} special form.
493* Summing up zap-to-char:: Using @code{point} and @code{search-forward}.
494
495@code{kill-region}
496
497* Complete kill-region:: The function definition.
498* condition-case:: Dealing with a problem.
499* Lisp macro::
500
501@code{copy-region-as-kill}
502
503* Complete copy-region-as-kill:: The complete function definition.
504* copy-region-as-kill body:: The body of @code{copy-region-as-kill}.
505
506The Body of @code{copy-region-as-kill}
507
508* last-command & this-command::
509* kill-append function::
510* kill-new function::
511
512Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar}
513
514* See variable current value::
515* defvar and asterisk::
516
517How Lists are Implemented
518
519* Lists diagrammed::
520* Symbols as Chest:: Exploring a powerful metaphor.
521* List Exercise::
522
523Yanking Text Back
524
525* Kill Ring Overview::
526* kill-ring-yank-pointer:: The kill ring is a list.
527* yank nthcdr Exercises:: The @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable.
528
529Loops and Recursion
530
531* while:: Causing a stretch of code to repeat.
532* dolist dotimes::
533* Recursion:: Causing a function to call itself.
534* Looping exercise::
535
536@code{while}
537
538* Looping with while:: Repeat so long as test returns true.
539* Loop Example:: A @code{while} loop that uses a list.
540* print-elements-of-list:: Uses @code{while}, @code{car}, @code{cdr}.
541* Incrementing Loop:: A loop with an incrementing counter.
542* Incrementing Loop Details::
543* Decrementing Loop:: A loop with a decrementing counter.
544
545Details of an Incrementing Loop
546
547* Incrementing Example:: Counting pebbles in a triangle.
548* Inc Example parts:: The parts of the function definition.
549* Inc Example altogether:: Putting the function definition together.
550
551Loop with a Decrementing Counter
552
553* Decrementing Example:: More pebbles on the beach.
554* Dec Example parts:: The parts of the function definition.
555* Dec Example altogether:: Putting the function definition together.
556
557Save your time: @code{dolist} and @code{dotimes}
558
559* dolist::
560* dotimes::
561
562Recursion
563
564* Building Robots:: Same model, different serial number ...
565* Recursive Definition Parts:: Walk until you stop ...
566* Recursion with list:: Using a list as the test whether to recurse.
567* Recursive triangle function::
568* Recursion with cond::
569* Recursive Patterns:: Often used templates.
570* No Deferment:: Don't store up work ...
571* No deferment solution::
572
573Recursion in Place of a Counter
574
575* Recursive Example arg of 1 or 2::
576* Recursive Example arg of 3 or 4::
577
578Recursive Patterns
579
580* Every::
581* Accumulate::
582* Keep::
583
584Regular Expression Searches
585
586* sentence-end:: The regular expression for @code{sentence-end}.
587* re-search-forward:: Very similar to @code{search-forward}.
588* forward-sentence:: A straightforward example of regexp search.
589* forward-paragraph:: A somewhat complex example.
590* etags:: How to create your own @file{TAGS} table.
591* Regexp Review::
592* re-search Exercises::
593
594@code{forward-sentence}
595
596* Complete forward-sentence::
597* fwd-sentence while loops:: Two @code{while} loops.
598* fwd-sentence re-search:: A regular expression search.
599
600@code{forward-paragraph}: a Goldmine of Functions
601
602* forward-paragraph in brief:: Key parts of the function definition.
603* fwd-para let:: The @code{let*} expression.
604* fwd-para while:: The forward motion @code{while} loop.
605
606Counting: Repetition and Regexps
607
608* Why Count Words::
ea4f7750 609* @value{COUNT-WORDS}:: Use a regexp, but find a problem.
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610* recursive-count-words:: Start with case of no words in region.
611* Counting Exercise::
612
ea4f7750 613The @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} Function
8cda6f8f 614
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615* Design @value{COUNT-WORDS}:: The definition using a @code{while} loop.
616* Whitespace Bug:: The Whitespace Bug in @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
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617
618Counting Words in a @code{defun}
619
620* Divide and Conquer::
621* Words and Symbols:: What to count?
622* Syntax:: What constitutes a word or symbol?
ea4f7750 623* count-words-in-defun:: Very like @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
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624* Several defuns:: Counting several defuns in a file.
625* Find a File:: Do you want to look at a file?
626* lengths-list-file:: A list of the lengths of many definitions.
627* Several files:: Counting in definitions in different files.
628* Several files recursively:: Recursively counting in different files.
629* Prepare the data:: Prepare the data for display in a graph.
630
631Count Words in @code{defuns} in Different Files
632
633* lengths-list-many-files:: Return a list of the lengths of defuns.
634* append:: Attach one list to another.
635
636Prepare the Data for Display in a Graph
637
638* Data for Display in Detail::
639* Sorting:: Sorting lists.
640* Files List:: Making a list of files.
641* Counting function definitions::
642
643Readying a Graph
644
645* Columns of a graph::
646* graph-body-print:: How to print the body of a graph.
647* recursive-graph-body-print::
648* Printed Axes::
649* Line Graph Exercise::
650
651Your @file{.emacs} File
652
653* Default Configuration::
654* Site-wide Init:: You can write site-wide init files.
655* defcustom:: Emacs will write code for you.
656* Beginning a .emacs File:: How to write a @code{.emacs file}.
657* Text and Auto-fill:: Automatically wrap lines.
658* Mail Aliases:: Use abbreviations for email addresses.
659* Indent Tabs Mode:: Don't use tabs with @TeX{}
660* Keybindings:: Create some personal keybindings.
661* Keymaps:: More about key binding.
662* Loading Files:: Load (i.e., evaluate) files automatically.
663* Autoload:: Make functions available.
664* Simple Extension:: Define a function; bind it to a key.
665* X11 Colors:: Colors in X.
666* Miscellaneous::
667* Mode Line:: How to customize your mode line.
668
669Debugging
670
671* debug:: How to use the built-in debugger.
672* debug-on-entry:: Start debugging when you call a function.
673* debug-on-quit:: Start debugging when you quit with @kbd{C-g}.
674* edebug:: How to use Edebug, a source level debugger.
675* Debugging Exercises::
676
677Handling the Kill Ring
678
679* What the Kill Ring Does::
680* current-kill::
681* yank:: Paste a copy of a clipped element.
682* yank-pop:: Insert element pointed to.
683* ring file::
684
685The @code{current-kill} Function
686
45d77375 687* Code for current-kill::
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688* Understanding current-kill::
689
690@code{current-kill} in Outline
691
692* Body of current-kill::
693* Digression concerning error:: How to mislead humans, but not computers.
694* Determining the Element::
695
09e80d9f 696A Graph with Labeled Axes
8cda6f8f 697
09e80d9f 698* Labeled Example::
8cda6f8f
GM
699* print-graph Varlist:: @code{let} expression in @code{print-graph}.
700* print-Y-axis:: Print a label for the vertical axis.
701* print-X-axis:: Print a horizontal label.
702* Print Whole Graph:: The function to print a complete graph.
703
704The @code{print-Y-axis} Function
705
706* print-Y-axis in Detail::
707* Height of label:: What height for the Y axis?
708* Compute a Remainder:: How to compute the remainder of a division.
709* Y Axis Element:: Construct a line for the Y axis.
710* Y-axis-column:: Generate a list of Y axis labels.
711* print-Y-axis Penultimate:: A not quite final version.
712
713The @code{print-X-axis} Function
714
715* Similarities differences:: Much like @code{print-Y-axis}, but not exactly.
716* X Axis Tic Marks:: Create tic marks for the horizontal axis.
717
718Printing the Whole Graph
719
720* The final version:: A few changes.
721* Test print-graph:: Run a short test.
722* Graphing words in defuns:: Executing the final code.
723* lambda:: How to write an anonymous function.
724* mapcar:: Apply a function to elements of a list.
725* Another Bug:: Yet another bug @dots{} most insidious.
726* Final printed graph:: The graph itself!
727
728@end detailmenu
729@end menu
730
d6adf7e7 731@node Preface
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732@unnumbered Preface
733
734Most of the GNU Emacs integrated environment is written in the programming
735language called Emacs Lisp. The code written in this programming
736language is the software---the sets of instructions---that tell the
737computer what to do when you give it commands. Emacs is designed so
738that you can write new code in Emacs Lisp and easily install it as an
739extension to the editor.
740
741(GNU Emacs is sometimes called an ``extensible editor'', but it does
742much more than provide editing capabilities. It is better to refer to
743Emacs as an ``extensible computing environment''. However, that
744phrase is quite a mouthful. It is easier to refer to Emacs simply as
745an editor. Moreover, everything you do in Emacs---find the Mayan date
746and phases of the moon, simplify polynomials, debug code, manage
747files, read letters, write books---all these activities are kinds of
748editing in the most general sense of the word.)
749
750@menu
751* Why:: Why learn Emacs Lisp?
752* On Reading this Text:: Read, gain familiarity, pick up habits....
753* Who You Are:: For whom this is written.
754* Lisp History::
755* Note for Novices:: You can read this as a novice.
756* Thank You::
757@end menu
758
8cda6f8f 759@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 760@node Why
8cda6f8f
GM
761@unnumberedsec Why Study Emacs Lisp?
762@end ifnottex
763
764Although Emacs Lisp is usually thought of in association only with Emacs,
765it is a full computer programming language. You can use Emacs Lisp as
766you would any other programming language.
767
768Perhaps you want to understand programming; perhaps you want to extend
769Emacs; or perhaps you want to become a programmer. This introduction to
770Emacs Lisp is designed to get you started: to guide you in learning the
771fundamentals of programming, and more importantly, to show you how you
772can teach yourself to go further.
773
d6adf7e7 774@node On Reading this Text
8cda6f8f
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775@unnumberedsec On Reading this Text
776
777All through this document, you will see little sample programs you can
778run inside of Emacs. If you read this document in Info inside of GNU
779Emacs, you can run the programs as they appear. (This is easy to do and
780is explained when the examples are presented.) Alternatively, you can
781read this introduction as a printed book while sitting beside a computer
782running Emacs. (This is what I like to do; I like printed books.) If
783you don't have a running Emacs beside you, you can still read this book,
784but in this case, it is best to treat it as a novel or as a travel guide
785to a country not yet visited: interesting, but not the same as being
786there.
787
40ba43b4 788Much of this introduction is dedicated to walkthroughs or guided tours
8cda6f8f
GM
789of code used in GNU Emacs. These tours are designed for two purposes:
790first, to give you familiarity with real, working code (code you use
791every day); and, second, to give you familiarity with the way Emacs
792works. It is interesting to see how a working environment is
793implemented.
794Also, I
795hope that you will pick up the habit of browsing through source code.
796You can learn from it and mine it for ideas. Having GNU Emacs is like
797having a dragon's cave of treasures.
798
799In addition to learning about Emacs as an editor and Emacs Lisp as a
800programming language, the examples and guided tours will give you an
801opportunity to get acquainted with Emacs as a Lisp programming
802environment. GNU Emacs supports programming and provides tools that
803you will want to become comfortable using, such as @kbd{M-.} (the key
804which invokes the @code{find-tag} command). You will also learn about
805buffers and other objects that are part of the environment.
806Learning about these features of Emacs is like learning new routes
807around your home town.
808
809@ignore
810In addition, I have written several programs as extended examples.
811Although these are examples, the programs are real. I use them.
812Other people use them. You may use them. Beyond the fragments of
813programs used for illustrations, there is very little in here that is
814`just for teaching purposes'; what you see is used. This is a great
815advantage of Emacs Lisp: it is easy to learn to use it for work.
816@end ignore
817
818Finally, I hope to convey some of the skills for using Emacs to
819learn aspects of programming that you don't know. You can often use
820Emacs to help you understand what puzzles you or to find out how to do
821something new. This self-reliance is not only a pleasure, but an
822advantage.
823
d6adf7e7 824@node Who You Are
8cda6f8f
GM
825@unnumberedsec For Whom This is Written
826
827This text is written as an elementary introduction for people who are
828not programmers. If you are a programmer, you may not be satisfied with
829this primer. The reason is that you may have become expert at reading
830reference manuals and be put off by the way this text is organized.
831
832An expert programmer who reviewed this text said to me:
833
834@quotation
835@i{I prefer to learn from reference manuals. I ``dive into'' each
836paragraph, and ``come up for air'' between paragraphs.}
837
838@i{When I get to the end of a paragraph, I assume that that subject is
839done, finished, that I know everything I need (with the
840possible exception of the case when the next paragraph starts talking
841about it in more detail). I expect that a well written reference manual
842will not have a lot of redundancy, and that it will have excellent
843pointers to the (one) place where the information I want is.}
844@end quotation
845
846This introduction is not written for this person!
847
848Firstly, I try to say everything at least three times: first, to
849introduce it; second, to show it in context; and third, to show it in a
850different context, or to review it.
851
852Secondly, I hardly ever put all the information about a subject in one
853place, much less in one paragraph. To my way of thinking, that imposes
854too heavy a burden on the reader. Instead I try to explain only what
855you need to know at the time. (Sometimes I include a little extra
856information so you won't be surprised later when the additional
857information is formally introduced.)
858
859When you read this text, you are not expected to learn everything the
860first time. Frequently, you need only make, as it were, a `nodding
861acquaintance' with some of the items mentioned. My hope is that I have
862structured the text and given you enough hints that you will be alert to
863what is important, and concentrate on it.
864
865You will need to ``dive into'' some paragraphs; there is no other way
866to read them. But I have tried to keep down the number of such
867paragraphs. This book is intended as an approachable hill, rather than
868as a daunting mountain.
869
870This introduction to @cite{Programming in Emacs Lisp} has a companion
871document,
872@iftex
873@cite{The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
874@end iftex
875@ifnottex
876@ref{Top, , The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, elisp, The GNU
877Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
878@end ifnottex
879The reference manual has more detail than this introduction. In the
880reference manual, all the information about one topic is concentrated
881in one place. You should turn to it if you are like the programmer
882quoted above. And, of course, after you have read this
883@cite{Introduction}, you will find the @cite{Reference Manual} useful
884when you are writing your own programs.
885
d6adf7e7 886@node Lisp History
8cda6f8f
GM
887@unnumberedsec Lisp History
888@cindex Lisp history
889
890Lisp was first developed in the late 1950s at the Massachusetts
891Institute of Technology for research in artificial intelligence. The
892great power of the Lisp language makes it superior for other purposes as
893well, such as writing editor commands and integrated environments.
894
895@cindex Maclisp
896@cindex Common Lisp
897GNU Emacs Lisp is largely inspired by Maclisp, which was written at MIT
898in the 1960s. It is somewhat inspired by Common Lisp, which became a
899standard in the 1980s. However, Emacs Lisp is much simpler than Common
900Lisp. (The standard Emacs distribution contains an optional extensions
901file, @file{cl.el}, that adds many Common Lisp features to Emacs Lisp.)
902
d6adf7e7 903@node Note for Novices
8cda6f8f
GM
904@unnumberedsec A Note for Novices
905
906If you don't know GNU Emacs, you can still read this document
907profitably. However, I recommend you learn Emacs, if only to learn to
908move around your computer screen. You can teach yourself how to use
909Emacs with the on-line tutorial. To use it, type @kbd{C-h t}. (This
910means you press and release the @key{CTRL} key and the @kbd{h} at the
911same time, and then press and release @kbd{t}.)
912
44e97401 913Also, I often refer to one of Emacs's standard commands by listing the
8cda6f8f
GM
914keys which you press to invoke the command and then giving the name of
915the command in parentheses, like this: @kbd{M-C-\}
916(@code{indent-region}). What this means is that the
917@code{indent-region} command is customarily invoked by typing
918@kbd{M-C-\}. (You can, if you wish, change the keys that are typed to
919invoke the command; this is called @dfn{rebinding}. @xref{Keymaps, ,
920Keymaps}.) The abbreviation @kbd{M-C-\} means that you type your
921@key{META} key, @key{CTRL} key and @key{\} key all at the same time.
09e80d9f 922(On many modern keyboards the @key{META} key is labeled
8cda6f8f
GM
923@key{ALT}.)
924Sometimes a combination like this is called a keychord, since it is
925similar to the way you play a chord on a piano. If your keyboard does
926not have a @key{META} key, the @key{ESC} key prefix is used in place
927of it. In this case, @kbd{M-C-\} means that you press and release your
928@key{ESC} key and then type the @key{CTRL} key and the @key{\} key at
929the same time. But usually @kbd{M-C-\} means press the @key{CTRL} key
09e80d9f 930along with the key that is labeled @key{ALT} and, at the same time,
8cda6f8f
GM
931press the @key{\} key.
932
933In addition to typing a lone keychord, you can prefix what you type
934with @kbd{C-u}, which is called the `universal argument'. The
935@kbd{C-u} keychord passes an argument to the subsequent command.
936Thus, to indent a region of plain text by 6 spaces, mark the region,
937and then type @w{@kbd{C-u 6 M-C-\}}. (If you do not specify a number,
938Emacs either passes the number 4 to the command or otherwise runs the
939command differently than it would otherwise.) @xref{Arguments, ,
940Numeric Arguments, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
941
942If you are reading this in Info using GNU Emacs, you can read through
943this whole document just by pressing the space bar, @key{SPC}.
944(To learn about Info, type @kbd{C-h i} and then select Info.)
945
946A note on terminology: when I use the word Lisp alone, I often am
947referring to the various dialects of Lisp in general, but when I speak
948of Emacs Lisp, I am referring to GNU Emacs Lisp in particular.
949
d6adf7e7 950@node Thank You
8cda6f8f
GM
951@unnumberedsec Thank You
952
953My thanks to all who helped me with this book. My especial thanks to
954@r{Jim Blandy}, @r{Noah Friedman}, @w{Jim Kingdon}, @r{Roland
1df7defd 955McGrath}, @w{Frank Ritter}, @w{Randy Smith}, @w{Richard M.
8cda6f8f
GM
956Stallman}, and @w{Melissa Weisshaus}. My thanks also go to both
957@w{Philip Johnson} and @w{David Stampe} for their patient
958encouragement. My mistakes are my own.
959
960@flushright
961Robert J. Chassell
4724cafb 962@email{bob@@gnu.org}
8cda6f8f
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963@end flushright
964
965@c ================ Beginning of main text ================
966
967@c Start main text on right-hand (verso) page
968
969@tex
970\par\vfill\supereject
971\headings off
972\ifodd\pageno
973 \par\vfill\supereject
974\else
975 \par\vfill\supereject
976 \page\hbox{}\page
977 \par\vfill\supereject
978\fi
979@end tex
980
52af8e0a
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981@c Note: this resetting of the page number back to 1 causes TeX to gripe
982@c about already having seen page numbers 1-4 before (in the preface):
983@c pdfTeX warning (ext4): destination with the same identifier (name{1})
984@c has been already used, duplicate ignored
985@c I guess that is harmless (what happens if a later part of the text
986@c makes a link to something in the first 4 pages though?).
1df7defd 987@c E.g., note that the Emacs manual has a preface, but does not bother
52af8e0a 988@c resetting the page numbers back to 1 after that.
8cda6f8f
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989@iftex
990@headings off
991@evenheading @thispage @| @| @thischapter
992@oddheading @thissection @| @| @thispage
993@global@pageno = 1
994@end iftex
995
d6adf7e7 996@node List Processing
8cda6f8f
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997@chapter List Processing
998
999To the untutored eye, Lisp is a strange programming language. In Lisp
1000code there are parentheses everywhere. Some people even claim that
1001the name stands for `Lots of Isolated Silly Parentheses'. But the
1002claim is unwarranted. Lisp stands for LISt Processing, and the
1003programming language handles @emph{lists} (and lists of lists) by
1004putting them between parentheses. The parentheses mark the boundaries
1005of the list. Sometimes a list is preceded by a single apostrophe or
1006quotation mark, @samp{'}@footnote{The single apostrophe or quotation
1007mark is an abbreviation for the function @code{quote}; you need not
1008think about functions now; functions are defined in @ref{Making
1009Errors, , Generate an Error Message}.} Lists are the basis of Lisp.
1010
1011@menu
1012* Lisp Lists:: What are lists?
1013* Run a Program:: Any list in Lisp is a program ready to run.
1014* Making Errors:: Generating an error message.
1015* Names & Definitions:: Names of symbols and function definitions.
1016* Lisp Interpreter:: What the Lisp interpreter does.
1017* Evaluation:: Running a program.
1018* Variables:: Returning a value from a variable.
1019* Arguments:: Passing information to a function.
1020* set & setq:: Setting the value of a variable.
1021* Summary:: The major points.
1022* Error Message Exercises::
1023@end menu
1024
d6adf7e7 1025@node Lisp Lists
8cda6f8f
GM
1026@section Lisp Lists
1027@cindex Lisp Lists
1028
1029In Lisp, a list looks like this: @code{'(rose violet daisy buttercup)}.
1030This list is preceded by a single apostrophe. It could just as well be
1031written as follows, which looks more like the kind of list you are likely
1032to be familiar with:
1033
1034@smallexample
1035@group
1036'(rose
1037 violet
1038 daisy
1039 buttercup)
1040@end group
1041@end smallexample
1042
1043@noindent
1044The elements of this list are the names of the four different flowers,
1045separated from each other by whitespace and surrounded by parentheses,
1046like flowers in a field with a stone wall around them.
1047@cindex Flowers in a field
1048
1049@menu
1050* Numbers Lists:: List have numbers, other lists, in them.
1051* Lisp Atoms:: Elemental entities.
1052* Whitespace in Lists:: Formatting lists to be readable.
1053* Typing Lists:: How GNU Emacs helps you type lists.
1054@end menu
1055
8cda6f8f 1056@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 1057@node Numbers Lists
8cda6f8f
GM
1058@unnumberedsubsec Numbers, Lists inside of Lists
1059@end ifnottex
1060
1061Lists can also have numbers in them, as in this list: @code{(+ 2 2)}.
1062This list has a plus-sign, @samp{+}, followed by two @samp{2}s, each
1063separated by whitespace.
1064
1065In Lisp, both data and programs are represented the same way; that is,
1066they are both lists of words, numbers, or other lists, separated by
1067whitespace and surrounded by parentheses. (Since a program looks like
1068data, one program may easily serve as data for another; this is a very
1069powerful feature of Lisp.) (Incidentally, these two parenthetical
1070remarks are @emph{not} Lisp lists, because they contain @samp{;} and
1071@samp{.} as punctuation marks.)
1072
1073@need 1200
1074Here is another list, this time with a list inside of it:
1075
1076@smallexample
1077'(this list has (a list inside of it))
1078@end smallexample
1079
1080The components of this list are the words @samp{this}, @samp{list},
1081@samp{has}, and the list @samp{(a list inside of it)}. The interior
1082list is made up of the words @samp{a}, @samp{list}, @samp{inside},
1083@samp{of}, @samp{it}.
1084
d6adf7e7 1085@node Lisp Atoms
8cda6f8f
GM
1086@subsection Lisp Atoms
1087@cindex Lisp Atoms
1088
1089In Lisp, what we have been calling words are called @dfn{atoms}. This
1090term comes from the historical meaning of the word atom, which means
1091`indivisible'. As far as Lisp is concerned, the words we have been
1092using in the lists cannot be divided into any smaller parts and still
1093mean the same thing as part of a program; likewise with numbers and
1094single character symbols like @samp{+}. On the other hand, unlike an
1095ancient atom, a list can be split into parts. (@xref{car cdr & cons,
1096, @code{car} @code{cdr} & @code{cons} Fundamental Functions}.)
1097
1098In a list, atoms are separated from each other by whitespace. They can be
1099right next to a parenthesis.
1100
1101@cindex @samp{empty list} defined
1102Technically speaking, a list in Lisp consists of parentheses surrounding
1103atoms separated by whitespace or surrounding other lists or surrounding
1104both atoms and other lists. A list can have just one atom in it or
1105have nothing in it at all. A list with nothing in it looks like this:
1106@code{()}, and is called the @dfn{empty list}. Unlike anything else, an
1107empty list is considered both an atom and a list at the same time.
1108
1109@cindex Symbolic expressions, introduced
1110@cindex @samp{expression} defined
1111@cindex @samp{form} defined
1112The printed representation of both atoms and lists are called
1113@dfn{symbolic expressions} or, more concisely, @dfn{s-expressions}.
1114The word @dfn{expression} by itself can refer to either the printed
1115representation, or to the atom or list as it is held internally in the
1116computer. Often, people use the term @dfn{expression}
1117indiscriminately. (Also, in many texts, the word @dfn{form} is used
1118as a synonym for expression.)
1119
1120Incidentally, the atoms that make up our universe were named such when
1121they were thought to be indivisible; but it has been found that physical
1122atoms are not indivisible. Parts can split off an atom or it can
1123fission into two parts of roughly equal size. Physical atoms were named
1124prematurely, before their truer nature was found. In Lisp, certain
1125kinds of atom, such as an array, can be separated into parts; but the
1126mechanism for doing this is different from the mechanism for splitting a
1127list. As far as list operations are concerned, the atoms of a list are
1128unsplittable.
1129
1130As in English, the meanings of the component letters of a Lisp atom
1131are different from the meaning the letters make as a word. For
1132example, the word for the South American sloth, the @samp{ai}, is
1133completely different from the two words, @samp{a}, and @samp{i}.
1134
1135There are many kinds of atom in nature but only a few in Lisp: for
1136example, @dfn{numbers}, such as 37, 511, or 1729, and @dfn{symbols}, such
1137as @samp{+}, @samp{foo}, or @samp{forward-line}. The words we have
1138listed in the examples above are all symbols. In everyday Lisp
1139conversation, the word ``atom'' is not often used, because programmers
1140usually try to be more specific about what kind of atom they are dealing
1141with. Lisp programming is mostly about symbols (and sometimes numbers)
1142within lists. (Incidentally, the preceding three word parenthetical
1143remark is a proper list in Lisp, since it consists of atoms, which in
1144this case are symbols, separated by whitespace and enclosed by
1145parentheses, without any non-Lisp punctuation.)
1146
1147@need 1250
6c499932
CY
1148Text between double quotation marks---even sentences or
1149paragraphs---is also an atom. Here is an example:
8cda6f8f
GM
1150@cindex Text between double quotation marks
1151
1152@smallexample
1153'(this list includes "text between quotation marks.")
1154@end smallexample
1155
1156@cindex @samp{string} defined
1157@noindent
1158In Lisp, all of the quoted text including the punctuation mark and the
1159blank spaces is a single atom. This kind of atom is called a
1160@dfn{string} (for `string of characters') and is the sort of thing that
1161is used for messages that a computer can print for a human to read.
1162Strings are a different kind of atom than numbers or symbols and are
1163used differently.
1164
d6adf7e7 1165@node Whitespace in Lists
8cda6f8f
GM
1166@subsection Whitespace in Lists
1167@cindex Whitespace in lists
1168
1169@need 1200
1170The amount of whitespace in a list does not matter. From the point of view
1171of the Lisp language,
1172
1173@smallexample
1174@group
1175'(this list
1176 looks like this)
1177@end group
1178@end smallexample
1179
1180@need 800
1181@noindent
1182is exactly the same as this:
1183
1184@smallexample
1185'(this list looks like this)
1186@end smallexample
1187
1188Both examples show what to Lisp is the same list, the list made up of
1189the symbols @samp{this}, @samp{list}, @samp{looks}, @samp{like}, and
1190@samp{this} in that order.
1191
1192Extra whitespace and newlines are designed to make a list more readable
1193by humans. When Lisp reads the expression, it gets rid of all the extra
1194whitespace (but it needs to have at least one space between atoms in
1195order to tell them apart.)
1196
1197Odd as it seems, the examples we have seen cover almost all of what Lisp
1198lists look like! Every other list in Lisp looks more or less like one
1199of these examples, except that the list may be longer and more complex.
1200In brief, a list is between parentheses, a string is between quotation
1201marks, a symbol looks like a word, and a number looks like a number.
1202(For certain situations, square brackets, dots and a few other special
1203characters may be used; however, we will go quite far without them.)
1204
d6adf7e7 1205@node Typing Lists
8cda6f8f
GM
1206@subsection GNU Emacs Helps You Type Lists
1207@cindex Help typing lists
1208@cindex Formatting help
1209
1210When you type a Lisp expression in GNU Emacs using either Lisp
1211Interaction mode or Emacs Lisp mode, you have available to you several
1212commands to format the Lisp expression so it is easy to read. For
1213example, pressing the @key{TAB} key automatically indents the line the
1214cursor is on by the right amount. A command to properly indent the
1215code in a region is customarily bound to @kbd{M-C-\}. Indentation is
1216designed so that you can see which elements of a list belong to which
1217list---elements of a sub-list are indented more than the elements of
1218the enclosing list.
1219
1220In addition, when you type a closing parenthesis, Emacs momentarily
1221jumps the cursor back to the matching opening parenthesis, so you can
1222see which one it is. This is very useful, since every list you type
1223in Lisp must have its closing parenthesis match its opening
1224parenthesis. (@xref{Major Modes, , Major Modes, emacs, The GNU Emacs
44e97401 1225Manual}, for more information about Emacs's modes.)
8cda6f8f 1226
d6adf7e7 1227@node Run a Program
8cda6f8f
GM
1228@section Run a Program
1229@cindex Run a program
1230@cindex Program, running one
1231
1232@cindex @samp{evaluate} defined
1233A list in Lisp---any list---is a program ready to run. If you run it
1234(for which the Lisp jargon is @dfn{evaluate}), the computer will do one
1235of three things: do nothing except return to you the list itself; send
1236you an error message; or, treat the first symbol in the list as a
1237command to do something. (Usually, of course, it is the last of these
1238three things that you really want!)
1239
1240@c use code for the single apostrophe, not samp.
1241The single apostrophe, @code{'}, that I put in front of some of the
1242example lists in preceding sections is called a @dfn{quote}; when it
1243precedes a list, it tells Lisp to do nothing with the list, other than
1244take it as it is written. But if there is no quote preceding a list,
1245the first item of the list is special: it is a command for the computer
1246to obey. (In Lisp, these commands are called @emph{functions}.) The list
1247@code{(+ 2 2)} shown above did not have a quote in front of it, so Lisp
1248understands that the @code{+} is an instruction to do something with the
1249rest of the list: add the numbers that follow.
1250
1251@need 1250
1252If you are reading this inside of GNU Emacs in Info, here is how you can
1253evaluate such a list: place your cursor immediately after the right
1254hand parenthesis of the following list and then type @kbd{C-x C-e}:
1255
1256@smallexample
1257(+ 2 2)
1258@end smallexample
1259
1260@c use code for the number four, not samp.
1261@noindent
1262You will see the number @code{4} appear in the echo area. (In the
1263jargon, what you have just done is ``evaluate the list.'' The echo area
1264is the line at the bottom of the screen that displays or ``echoes''
1265text.) Now try the same thing with a quoted list: place the cursor
1266right after the following list and type @kbd{C-x C-e}:
1267
1268@smallexample
1269'(this is a quoted list)
1270@end smallexample
1271
1272@noindent
1273You will see @code{(this is a quoted list)} appear in the echo area.
1274
1275@cindex Lisp interpreter, explained
1276@cindex Interpreter, Lisp, explained
1277In both cases, what you are doing is giving a command to the program
1278inside of GNU Emacs called the @dfn{Lisp interpreter}---giving the
1279interpreter a command to evaluate the expression. The name of the Lisp
1280interpreter comes from the word for the task done by a human who comes
1281up with the meaning of an expression---who ``interprets'' it.
1282
1283You can also evaluate an atom that is not part of a list---one that is
1284not surrounded by parentheses; again, the Lisp interpreter translates
1285from the humanly readable expression to the language of the computer.
1286But before discussing this (@pxref{Variables}), we will discuss what the
1287Lisp interpreter does when you make an error.
1288
d6adf7e7 1289@node Making Errors
8cda6f8f
GM
1290@section Generate an Error Message
1291@cindex Generate an error message
1292@cindex Error message generation
1293
1294Partly so you won't worry if you do it accidentally, we will now give
1295a command to the Lisp interpreter that generates an error message.
1296This is a harmless activity; and indeed, we will often try to generate
1297error messages intentionally. Once you understand the jargon, error
1298messages can be informative. Instead of being called ``error''
1299messages, they should be called ``help'' messages. They are like
ee7683eb 1300signposts to a traveler in a strange country; deciphering them can be
8cda6f8f
GM
1301hard, but once understood, they can point the way.
1302
1303The error message is generated by a built-in GNU Emacs debugger. We
1304will `enter the debugger'. You get out of the debugger by typing @code{q}.
1305
1306What we will do is evaluate a list that is not quoted and does not
1307have a meaningful command as its first element. Here is a list almost
1308exactly the same as the one we just used, but without the single-quote
1309in front of it. Position the cursor right after it and type @kbd{C-x
1310C-e}:
1311
1312@smallexample
1313(this is an unquoted list)
1314@end smallexample
1315
8f4ea8e0 1316@ignore
8cda6f8f
GM
1317@noindent
1318What you see depends on which version of Emacs you are running. GNU
1319Emacs version 22 provides more information than version 20 and before.
1320First, the more recent result of generating an error; then the
1321earlier, version 20 result.
1322
1323@need 1250
1324@noindent
1325In GNU Emacs version 22, a @file{*Backtrace*} window will open up and
1326you will see the following in it:
8f4ea8e0
GM
1327@end ignore
1328
1329A @file{*Backtrace*} window will open up and you should see the
1330following in it:
8cda6f8f
GM
1331
1332@smallexample
1333@group
1334---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
1335Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function this)
1336 (this is an unquoted list)
1337 eval((this is an unquoted list))
1338 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
1339 eval-last-sexp(nil)
1340 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
1341---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
1342@end group
1343@end smallexample
1344
1345@need 1200
1346@noindent
1347Your cursor will be in this window (you may have to wait a few seconds
1348before it becomes visible). To quit the debugger and make the
1349debugger window go away, type:
1350
1351@smallexample
1352q
1353@end smallexample
1354
1355@noindent
1356Please type @kbd{q} right now, so you become confident that you can
1357get out of the debugger. Then, type @kbd{C-x C-e} again to re-enter
1358it.
1359
1360@cindex @samp{function} defined
1361Based on what we already know, we can almost read this error message.
1362
1363You read the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer from the bottom up; it tells
1364you what Emacs did. When you typed @kbd{C-x C-e}, you made an
1365interactive call to the command @code{eval-last-sexp}. @code{eval} is
1366an abbreviation for `evaluate' and @code{sexp} is an abbreviation for
1367`symbolic expression'. The command means `evaluate last symbolic
1368expression', which is the expression just before your cursor.
1369
1370Each line above tells you what the Lisp interpreter evaluated next.
1371The most recent action is at the top. The buffer is called the
1372@file{*Backtrace*} buffer because it enables you to track Emacs
1373backwards.
1374
1375@need 800
1376At the top of the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer, you see the line:
1377
1378@smallexample
1379Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function this)
1380@end smallexample
1381
1382@noindent
1383The Lisp interpreter tried to evaluate the first atom of the list, the
1384word @samp{this}. It is this action that generated the error message
1385@samp{void-function this}.
1386
1387The message contains the words @samp{void-function} and @samp{this}.
1388
1389@cindex @samp{function} defined
1390The word @samp{function} was mentioned once before. It is a very
1391important word. For our purposes, we can define it by saying that a
1392@dfn{function} is a set of instructions to the computer that tell the
1393computer to do something.
1394
1395Now we can begin to understand the error message: @samp{void-function
1396this}. The function (that is, the word @samp{this}) does not have a
1397definition of any set of instructions for the computer to carry out.
1398
1399The slightly odd word, @samp{void-function}, is designed to cover the
1400way Emacs Lisp is implemented, which is that when a symbol does not
1401have a function definition attached to it, the place that should
1402contain the instructions is `void'.
1403
1404On the other hand, since we were able to add 2 plus 2 successfully, by
1405evaluating @code{(+ 2 2)}, we can infer that the symbol @code{+} must
1406have a set of instructions for the computer to obey and those
1407instructions must be to add the numbers that follow the @code{+}.
1408
8f4ea8e0
GM
1409It is possible to prevent Emacs entering the debugger in cases like
1410this. We do not explain how to do that here, but we will mention what
1411the result looks like, because you may encounter a similar situation
1412if there is a bug in some Emacs code that you are using. In such
1413cases, you will see only one line of error message; it will appear in
1414the echo area and look like this:
8cda6f8f
GM
1415
1416@smallexample
1417Symbol's function definition is void:@: this
1418@end smallexample
1419
1420@noindent
8f4ea8e0 1421@ignore
8cda6f8f 1422(Also, your terminal may beep at you---some do, some don't; and others
8f4ea8e0
GM
1423blink. This is just a device to get your attention.)
1424@end ignore
1425The message goes away as soon as you type a key, even just to
1426move the cursor.
8cda6f8f
GM
1427
1428We know the meaning of the word @samp{Symbol}. It refers to the first
1429atom of the list, the word @samp{this}. The word @samp{function}
1430refers to the instructions that tell the computer what to do.
1431(Technically, the symbol tells the computer where to find the
1432instructions, but this is a complication we can ignore for the
1433moment.)
1434
1435The error message can be understood: @samp{Symbol's function
1436definition is void:@: this}. The symbol (that is, the word
1437@samp{this}) lacks instructions for the computer to carry out.
1438
d6adf7e7 1439@node Names & Definitions
8cda6f8f
GM
1440@section Symbol Names and Function Definitions
1441@cindex Symbol names
1442
1443We can articulate another characteristic of Lisp based on what we have
1444discussed so far---an important characteristic: a symbol, like
1445@code{+}, is not itself the set of instructions for the computer to
1446carry out. Instead, the symbol is used, perhaps temporarily, as a way
1447of locating the definition or set of instructions. What we see is the
1448name through which the instructions can be found. Names of people
1449work the same way. I can be referred to as @samp{Bob}; however, I am
1450not the letters @samp{B}, @samp{o}, @samp{b} but am, or was, the
1451consciousness consistently associated with a particular life-form.
1452The name is not me, but it can be used to refer to me.
1453
1454In Lisp, one set of instructions can be attached to several names.
1455For example, the computer instructions for adding numbers can be
1456linked to the symbol @code{plus} as well as to the symbol @code{+}
1457(and are in some dialects of Lisp). Among humans, I can be referred
1458to as @samp{Robert} as well as @samp{Bob} and by other words as well.
1459
1460On the other hand, a symbol can have only one function definition
1461attached to it at a time. Otherwise, the computer would be confused as
1462to which definition to use. If this were the case among people, only
1463one person in the world could be named @samp{Bob}. However, the function
1464definition to which the name refers can be changed readily.
1465(@xref{Install, , Install a Function Definition}.)
1466
1467Since Emacs Lisp is large, it is customary to name symbols in a way
1468that identifies the part of Emacs to which the function belongs.
1469Thus, all the names for functions that deal with Texinfo start with
1470@samp{texinfo-} and those for functions that deal with reading mail
1471start with @samp{rmail-}.
1472
d6adf7e7 1473@node Lisp Interpreter
8cda6f8f
GM
1474@section The Lisp Interpreter
1475@cindex Lisp interpreter, what it does
1476@cindex Interpreter, what it does
1477
1478Based on what we have seen, we can now start to figure out what the
1479Lisp interpreter does when we command it to evaluate a list.
1480First, it looks to see whether there is a quote before the list; if
1481there is, the interpreter just gives us the list. On the other
1482hand, if there is no quote, the interpreter looks at the first element
1483in the list and sees whether it has a function definition. If it does,
1484the interpreter carries out the instructions in the function definition.
1485Otherwise, the interpreter prints an error message.
1486
1487This is how Lisp works. Simple. There are added complications which we
1488will get to in a minute, but these are the fundamentals. Of course, to
1489write Lisp programs, you need to know how to write function definitions
1490and attach them to names, and how to do this without confusing either
1491yourself or the computer.
1492
1493@menu
1494* Complications:: Variables, Special forms, Lists within.
1495* Byte Compiling:: Specially processing code for speed.
1496@end menu
1497
8cda6f8f 1498@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 1499@node Complications
8cda6f8f
GM
1500@unnumberedsubsec Complications
1501@end ifnottex
1502
1503Now, for the first complication. In addition to lists, the Lisp
1504interpreter can evaluate a symbol that is not quoted and does not have
1505parentheses around it. The Lisp interpreter will attempt to determine
1506the symbol's value as a @dfn{variable}. This situation is described
1507in the section on variables. (@xref{Variables}.)
1508
1509@cindex Special form
2325c82f
XF
1510The second complication occurs because some functions are unusual and
1511do not work in the usual manner. Those that don't are called
1512@dfn{special forms}. They are used for special jobs, like defining a
1513function, and there are not many of them. In the next few chapters,
1514you will be introduced to several of the more important special forms.
2325c82f 1515
09b98a01
GM
1516As well as special forms, there are also @dfn{macros}. A macro
1517is a construct defined in Lisp, which differs from a function in that it
1518translates a Lisp expression into another expression that is to be
1519evaluated in place of the original expression. (@xref{Lisp macro}.)
1520
1521For the purposes of this introduction, you do not need to worry too much
1522about whether something is a special form, macro, or ordinary function.
1523For example, @code{if} is a special form (@pxref{if}), but @code{when}
1524is a macro (@pxref{Lisp macro}). In earlier versions of Emacs,
1525@code{defun} was a special form, but now it is a macro (@pxref{defun}).
1526It still behaves in the same way.
8cda6f8f 1527
09b98a01 1528The final complication is this: if the function that the
8cda6f8f
GM
1529Lisp interpreter is looking at is not a special form, and if it is part
1530of a list, the Lisp interpreter looks to see whether the list has a list
1531inside of it. If there is an inner list, the Lisp interpreter first
1532figures out what it should do with the inside list, and then it works on
1533the outside list. If there is yet another list embedded inside the
1534inner list, it works on that one first, and so on. It always works on
1535the innermost list first. The interpreter works on the innermost list
1536first, to evaluate the result of that list. The result may be
1537used by the enclosing expression.
1538
1539Otherwise, the interpreter works left to right, from one expression to
1540the next.
1541
d6adf7e7 1542@node Byte Compiling
8cda6f8f
GM
1543@subsection Byte Compiling
1544@cindex Byte compiling
1545
1546One other aspect of interpreting: the Lisp interpreter is able to
1547interpret two kinds of entity: humanly readable code, on which we will
1548focus exclusively, and specially processed code, called @dfn{byte
1549compiled} code, which is not humanly readable. Byte compiled code
1550runs faster than humanly readable code.
1551
1552You can transform humanly readable code into byte compiled code by
1553running one of the compile commands such as @code{byte-compile-file}.
1554Byte compiled code is usually stored in a file that ends with a
1555@file{.elc} extension rather than a @file{.el} extension. You will
1556see both kinds of file in the @file{emacs/lisp} directory; the files
1557to read are those with @file{.el} extensions.
1558
1559As a practical matter, for most things you might do to customize or
1560extend Emacs, you do not need to byte compile; and I will not discuss
1561the topic here. @xref{Byte Compilation, , Byte Compilation, elisp,
1562The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for a full description of byte
1563compilation.
1564
d6adf7e7 1565@node Evaluation
8cda6f8f
GM
1566@section Evaluation
1567@cindex Evaluation
1568
1569When the Lisp interpreter works on an expression, the term for the
1570activity is called @dfn{evaluation}. We say that the interpreter
1571`evaluates the expression'. I've used this term several times before.
1572The word comes from its use in everyday language, `to ascertain the
1573value or amount of; to appraise', according to @cite{Webster's New
1574Collegiate Dictionary}.
1575
1576@menu
1577* How the Interpreter Acts:: Returns and Side Effects...
1578* Evaluating Inner Lists:: Lists within lists...
1579@end menu
1580
8cda6f8f 1581@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 1582@node How the Interpreter Acts
8cda6f8f
GM
1583@unnumberedsubsec How the Lisp Interpreter Acts
1584@end ifnottex
1585
1586@cindex @samp{returned value} explained
1587After evaluating an expression, the Lisp interpreter will most likely
1588@dfn{return} the value that the computer produces by carrying out the
1589instructions it found in the function definition, or perhaps it will
1590give up on that function and produce an error message. (The interpreter
1591may also find itself tossed, so to speak, to a different function or it
1592may attempt to repeat continually what it is doing for ever and ever in
1593what is called an `infinite loop'. These actions are less common; and
1594we can ignore them.) Most frequently, the interpreter returns a value.
1595
1596@cindex @samp{side effect} defined
1597At the same time the interpreter returns a value, it may do something
1598else as well, such as move a cursor or copy a file; this other kind of
1599action is called a @dfn{side effect}. Actions that we humans think are
1600important, such as printing results, are often ``side effects'' to the
1601Lisp interpreter. The jargon can sound peculiar, but it turns out that
1602it is fairly easy to learn to use side effects.
1603
1604In summary, evaluating a symbolic expression most commonly causes the
1605Lisp interpreter to return a value and perhaps carry out a side effect;
1606or else produce an error.
1607
d6adf7e7 1608@node Evaluating Inner Lists
8cda6f8f
GM
1609@subsection Evaluating Inner Lists
1610@cindex Inner list evaluation
1611@cindex Evaluating inner lists
1612
1613If evaluation applies to a list that is inside another list, the outer
1614list may use the value returned by the first evaluation as information
1615when the outer list is evaluated. This explains why inner expressions
1616are evaluated first: the values they return are used by the outer
1617expressions.
1618
1619@need 1250
1620We can investigate this process by evaluating another addition example.
1621Place your cursor after the following expression and type @kbd{C-x C-e}:
1622
1623@smallexample
1624(+ 2 (+ 3 3))
1625@end smallexample
1626
1627@noindent
1628The number 8 will appear in the echo area.
1629
1630What happens is that the Lisp interpreter first evaluates the inner
1631expression, @code{(+ 3 3)}, for which the value 6 is returned; then it
1632evaluates the outer expression as if it were written @code{(+ 2 6)}, which
1633returns the value 8. Since there are no more enclosing expressions to
1634evaluate, the interpreter prints that value in the echo area.
1635
1636Now it is easy to understand the name of the command invoked by the
1637keystrokes @kbd{C-x C-e}: the name is @code{eval-last-sexp}. The
1638letters @code{sexp} are an abbreviation for `symbolic expression', and
1639@code{eval} is an abbreviation for `evaluate'. The command means
1640`evaluate last symbolic expression'.
1641
1642As an experiment, you can try evaluating the expression by putting the
1643cursor at the beginning of the next line immediately following the
1644expression, or inside the expression.
1645
1646@need 800
1647Here is another copy of the expression:
1648
1649@smallexample
1650(+ 2 (+ 3 3))
1651@end smallexample
1652
1653@noindent
1654If you place the cursor at the beginning of the blank line that
1655immediately follows the expression and type @kbd{C-x C-e}, you will
1656still get the value 8 printed in the echo area. Now try putting the
1657cursor inside the expression. If you put it right after the next to
1658last parenthesis (so it appears to sit on top of the last parenthesis),
1659you will get a 6 printed in the echo area! This is because the command
1660evaluates the expression @code{(+ 3 3)}.
1661
1662Now put the cursor immediately after a number. Type @kbd{C-x C-e} and
1663you will get the number itself. In Lisp, if you evaluate a number, you
1664get the number itself---this is how numbers differ from symbols. If you
1665evaluate a list starting with a symbol like @code{+}, you will get a
1666value returned that is the result of the computer carrying out the
1667instructions in the function definition attached to that name. If a
1668symbol by itself is evaluated, something different happens, as we will
1669see in the next section.
1670
d6adf7e7 1671@node Variables
8cda6f8f
GM
1672@section Variables
1673@cindex Variables
1674
1675In Emacs Lisp, a symbol can have a value attached to it just as it can
1676have a function definition attached to it. The two are different.
1677The function definition is a set of instructions that a computer will
1678obey. A value, on the other hand, is something, such as number or a
1679name, that can vary (which is why such a symbol is called a variable).
1680The value of a symbol can be any expression in Lisp, such as a symbol,
1681number, list, or string. A symbol that has a value is often called a
1682@dfn{variable}.
1683
1684A symbol can have both a function definition and a value attached to
1685it at the same time. Or it can have just one or the other.
1686The two are separate. This is somewhat similar
1687to the way the name Cambridge can refer to the city in Massachusetts
1688and have some information attached to the name as well, such as
1689``great programming center''.
1690
1691@ignore
1692(Incidentally, in Emacs Lisp, a symbol can have two
1693other things attached to it, too: a property list and a documentation
1694string; these are discussed later.)
1695@end ignore
1696
1697Another way to think about this is to imagine a symbol as being a chest
1698of drawers. The function definition is put in one drawer, the value in
1699another, and so on. What is put in the drawer holding the value can be
1700changed without affecting the contents of the drawer holding the
1701function definition, and vice-verse.
1702
1703@menu
1704* fill-column Example::
1705* Void Function:: The error message for a symbol
1706 without a function.
1707* Void Variable:: The error message for a symbol without a value.
1708@end menu
1709
8cda6f8f 1710@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 1711@node fill-column Example
8cda6f8f
GM
1712@unnumberedsubsec @code{fill-column}, an Example Variable
1713@end ifnottex
1714
1715@findex fill-column, @r{an example variable}
1716@cindex Example variable, @code{fill-column}
1717@cindex Variable, example of, @code{fill-column}
1718The variable @code{fill-column} illustrates a symbol with a value
1719attached to it: in every GNU Emacs buffer, this symbol is set to some
1720value, usually 72 or 70, but sometimes to some other value. To find the
1721value of this symbol, evaluate it by itself. If you are reading this in
1722Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can do this by putting the cursor after
1723the symbol and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}:
1724
1725@smallexample
1726fill-column
1727@end smallexample
1728
1729@noindent
1730After I typed @kbd{C-x C-e}, Emacs printed the number 72 in my echo
1731area. This is the value for which @code{fill-column} is set for me as I
1732write this. It may be different for you in your Info buffer. Notice
1733that the value returned as a variable is printed in exactly the same way
1734as the value returned by a function carrying out its instructions. From
1735the point of view of the Lisp interpreter, a value returned is a value
1736returned. What kind of expression it came from ceases to matter once
1737the value is known.
1738
1739A symbol can have any value attached to it or, to use the jargon, we can
1740@dfn{bind} the variable to a value: to a number, such as 72; to a
1741string, @code{"such as this"}; to a list, such as @code{(spruce pine
1742oak)}; we can even bind a variable to a function definition.
1743
1744A symbol can be bound to a value in several ways. @xref{set & setq, ,
1745Setting the Value of a Variable}, for information about one way to do
1746this.
1747
d6adf7e7 1748@node Void Function
8cda6f8f
GM
1749@subsection Error Message for a Symbol Without a Function
1750@cindex Symbol without function error
1751@cindex Error for symbol without function
1752
1753When we evaluated @code{fill-column} to find its value as a variable,
1754we did not place parentheses around the word. This is because we did
1755not intend to use it as a function name.
1756
1757If @code{fill-column} were the first or only element of a list, the
1758Lisp interpreter would attempt to find the function definition
1759attached to it. But @code{fill-column} has no function definition.
1760Try evaluating this:
1761
1762@smallexample
1763(fill-column)
1764@end smallexample
1765
1766@need 1250
1767@noindent
8f4ea8e0 1768You will create a @file{*Backtrace*} buffer that says:
8cda6f8f
GM
1769
1770@smallexample
1771@group
1772---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
1773Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function fill-column)
1774 (fill-column)
1775 eval((fill-column))
1776 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
1777 eval-last-sexp(nil)
1778 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
1779---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
1780@end group
1781@end smallexample
1782
1783@noindent
1784(Remember, to quit the debugger and make the debugger window go away,
1785type @kbd{q} in the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer.)
1786
1787@ignore
1788@need 800
1789In GNU Emacs 20 and before, you will produce an error message that says:
1790
1791@smallexample
1792Symbol's function definition is void:@: fill-column
1793@end smallexample
1794
1795@noindent
1796(The message will go away as soon as you move the cursor or type
1797another key.)
1798@end ignore
1799
d6adf7e7 1800@node Void Variable
8cda6f8f
GM
1801@subsection Error Message for a Symbol Without a Value
1802@cindex Symbol without value error
1803@cindex Error for symbol without value
1804
1805If you attempt to evaluate a symbol that does not have a value bound to
1806it, you will receive an error message. You can see this by
1807experimenting with our 2 plus 2 addition. In the following expression,
1808put your cursor right after the @code{+}, before the first number 2,
1809type @kbd{C-x C-e}:
1810
1811@smallexample
1812(+ 2 2)
1813@end smallexample
1814
1815@need 1500
1816@noindent
1817In GNU Emacs 22, you will create a @file{*Backtrace*} buffer that
1818says:
1819
1820@smallexample
1821@group
1822---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
1823Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-variable +)
1824 eval(+)
1825 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
1826 eval-last-sexp(nil)
1827 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
1828---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
1829@end group
1830@end smallexample
1831
1832@noindent
8f4ea8e0 1833(Again, you can quit the debugger by
8cda6f8f
GM
1834typing @kbd{q} in the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer.)
1835
1836This backtrace is different from the very first error message we saw,
1837which said, @samp{Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function this)}.
1838In this case, the function does not have a value as a variable; while
1839in the other error message, the function (the word `this') did not
1840have a definition.
1841
1842In this experiment with the @code{+}, what we did was cause the Lisp
1843interpreter to evaluate the @code{+} and look for the value of the
1844variable instead of the function definition. We did this by placing the
1845cursor right after the symbol rather than after the parenthesis of the
1846enclosing list as we did before. As a consequence, the Lisp interpreter
8f4ea8e0 1847evaluated the preceding s-expression, which in this case was
8cda6f8f
GM
1848@code{+} by itself.
1849
1850Since @code{+} does not have a value bound to it, just the function
1851definition, the error message reported that the symbol's value as a
1852variable was void.
1853
1854@ignore
1855@need 800
1856In GNU Emacs version 20 and before, your error message will say:
1857
1858@example
1859Symbol's value as variable is void:@: +
1860@end example
1861
1862@noindent
1863The meaning is the same as in GNU Emacs 22.
1864@end ignore
1865
d6adf7e7 1866@node Arguments
8cda6f8f
GM
1867@section Arguments
1868@cindex Arguments
1869@cindex Passing information to functions
1870
1871To see how information is passed to functions, let's look again at
1872our old standby, the addition of two plus two. In Lisp, this is written
1873as follows:
1874
1875@smallexample
1876(+ 2 2)
1877@end smallexample
1878
1879If you evaluate this expression, the number 4 will appear in your echo
1880area. What the Lisp interpreter does is add the numbers that follow
1881the @code{+}.
1882
1883@cindex @samp{argument} defined
1884The numbers added by @code{+} are called the @dfn{arguments} of the
1885function @code{+}. These numbers are the information that is given to
1886or @dfn{passed} to the function.
1887
1888The word `argument' comes from the way it is used in mathematics and
1889does not refer to a disputation between two people; instead it refers to
1890the information presented to the function, in this case, to the
1891@code{+}. In Lisp, the arguments to a function are the atoms or lists
1892that follow the function. The values returned by the evaluation of
1893these atoms or lists are passed to the function. Different functions
1894require different numbers of arguments; some functions require none at
1895all.@footnote{It is curious to track the path by which the word `argument'
1896came to have two different meanings, one in mathematics and the other in
1897everyday English. According to the @cite{Oxford English Dictionary},
1898the word derives from the Latin for @samp{to make clear, prove}; thus it
1899came to mean, by one thread of derivation, `the evidence offered as
1900proof', which is to say, `the information offered', which led to its
1901meaning in Lisp. But in the other thread of derivation, it came to mean
1902`to assert in a manner against which others may make counter
1903assertions', which led to the meaning of the word as a disputation.
1904(Note here that the English word has two different definitions attached
1905to it at the same time. By contrast, in Emacs Lisp, a symbol cannot
1906have two different function definitions at the same time.)}
1907
1908@menu
1909* Data types:: Types of data passed to a function.
1910* Args as Variable or List:: An argument can be the value
1911 of a variable or list.
1912* Variable Number of Arguments:: Some functions may take a
1913 variable number of arguments.
1914* Wrong Type of Argument:: Passing an argument of the wrong type
1915 to a function.
1916* message:: A useful function for sending messages.
1917@end menu
1918
d6adf7e7 1919@node Data types
8cda6f8f
GM
1920@subsection Arguments' Data Types
1921@cindex Data types
1922@cindex Types of data
1923@cindex Arguments' data types
1924
1925The type of data that should be passed to a function depends on what
1926kind of information it uses. The arguments to a function such as
1927@code{+} must have values that are numbers, since @code{+} adds numbers.
1928Other functions use different kinds of data for their arguments.
1929
1930@need 1250
1931@findex concat
1932For example, the @code{concat} function links together or unites two or
1933more strings of text to produce a string. The arguments are strings.
1934Concatenating the two character strings @code{abc}, @code{def} produces
1935the single string @code{abcdef}. This can be seen by evaluating the
1936following:
1937
1938@smallexample
1939(concat "abc" "def")
1940@end smallexample
1941
1942@noindent
1943The value produced by evaluating this expression is @code{"abcdef"}.
1944
1945A function such as @code{substring} uses both a string and numbers as
1946arguments. The function returns a part of the string, a substring of
1947the first argument. This function takes three arguments. Its first
1948argument is the string of characters, the second and third arguments are
1949numbers that indicate the beginning and end of the substring. The
1950numbers are a count of the number of characters (including spaces and
e4920bc9 1951punctuation) from the beginning of the string.
8cda6f8f
GM
1952
1953@need 800
1954For example, if you evaluate the following:
1955
1956@smallexample
1957(substring "The quick brown fox jumped." 16 19)
1958@end smallexample
1959
1960@noindent
1961you will see @code{"fox"} appear in the echo area. The arguments are the
1962string and the two numbers.
1963
1964Note that the string passed to @code{substring} is a single atom even
1965though it is made up of several words separated by spaces. Lisp counts
1966everything between the two quotation marks as part of the string,
1967including the spaces. You can think of the @code{substring} function as
1968a kind of `atom smasher' since it takes an otherwise indivisible atom
1969and extracts a part. However, @code{substring} is only able to extract
1970a substring from an argument that is a string, not from another type of
1971atom such as a number or symbol.
1972
d6adf7e7 1973@node Args as Variable or List
8cda6f8f
GM
1974@subsection An Argument as the Value of a Variable or List
1975
1976An argument can be a symbol that returns a value when it is evaluated.
1977For example, when the symbol @code{fill-column} by itself is evaluated,
1978it returns a number. This number can be used in an addition.
1979
1980@need 1250
1981Position the cursor after the following expression and type @kbd{C-x
1982C-e}:
1983
1984@smallexample
1985(+ 2 fill-column)
1986@end smallexample
1987
1988@noindent
1989The value will be a number two more than what you get by evaluating
1990@code{fill-column} alone. For me, this is 74, because my value of
1991@code{fill-column} is 72.
1992
1993As we have just seen, an argument can be a symbol that returns a value
1994when evaluated. In addition, an argument can be a list that returns a
1995value when it is evaluated. For example, in the following expression,
1996the arguments to the function @code{concat} are the strings
1997@w{@code{"The "}} and @w{@code{" red foxes."}} and the list
1998@code{(number-to-string (+ 2 fill-column))}.
1999
2000@c For GNU Emacs 22, need number-to-string
2001@smallexample
2002(concat "The " (number-to-string (+ 2 fill-column)) " red foxes.")
2003@end smallexample
2004
2005@noindent
2006If you evaluate this expression---and if, as with my Emacs,
2007@code{fill-column} evaluates to 72---@code{"The 74 red foxes."} will
2008appear in the echo area. (Note that you must put spaces after the
2009word @samp{The} and before the word @samp{red} so they will appear in
2010the final string. The function @code{number-to-string} converts the
2011integer that the addition function returns to a string.
2012@code{number-to-string} is also known as @code{int-to-string}.)
2013
d6adf7e7 2014@node Variable Number of Arguments
8cda6f8f
GM
2015@subsection Variable Number of Arguments
2016@cindex Variable number of arguments
2017@cindex Arguments, variable number of
2018
2019Some functions, such as @code{concat}, @code{+} or @code{*}, take any
2020number of arguments. (The @code{*} is the symbol for multiplication.)
2021This can be seen by evaluating each of the following expressions in
2022the usual way. What you will see in the echo area is printed in this
2023text after @samp{@result{}}, which you may read as `evaluates to'.
2024
2025@need 1250
2026In the first set, the functions have no arguments:
2027
2028@smallexample
2029@group
2030(+) @result{} 0
2031
2032(*) @result{} 1
2033@end group
2034@end smallexample
2035
2036@need 1250
2037In this set, the functions have one argument each:
2038
2039@smallexample
2040@group
2041(+ 3) @result{} 3
2042
2043(* 3) @result{} 3
2044@end group
2045@end smallexample
2046
2047@need 1250
2048In this set, the functions have three arguments each:
2049
2050@smallexample
2051@group
2052(+ 3 4 5) @result{} 12
2053
2054(* 3 4 5) @result{} 60
2055@end group
2056@end smallexample
2057
d6adf7e7 2058@node Wrong Type of Argument
8cda6f8f
GM
2059@subsection Using the Wrong Type Object as an Argument
2060@cindex Wrong type of argument
2061@cindex Argument, wrong type of
2062
2063When a function is passed an argument of the wrong type, the Lisp
2064interpreter produces an error message. For example, the @code{+}
2065function expects the values of its arguments to be numbers. As an
2066experiment we can pass it the quoted symbol @code{hello} instead of a
2067number. Position the cursor after the following expression and type
2068@kbd{C-x C-e}:
2069
2070@smallexample
2071(+ 2 'hello)
2072@end smallexample
2073
2074@noindent
2075When you do this you will generate an error message. What has happened
2076is that @code{+} has tried to add the 2 to the value returned by
2077@code{'hello}, but the value returned by @code{'hello} is the symbol
2078@code{hello}, not a number. Only numbers can be added. So @code{+}
2079could not carry out its addition.
2080
2081@need 1250
8f4ea8e0 2082You will create and enter a @file{*Backtrace*} buffer that says:
8cda6f8f
GM
2083
2084@noindent
2085@smallexample
2086@group
2087---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
2088Debugger entered--Lisp error:
2089 (wrong-type-argument number-or-marker-p hello)
2090 +(2 hello)
2091 eval((+ 2 (quote hello)))
2092 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
2093 eval-last-sexp(nil)
2094 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
2095---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
2096@end group
2097@end smallexample
2098
2099@need 1250
2100As usual, the error message tries to be helpful and makes sense after you
2101learn how to read it.@footnote{@code{(quote hello)} is an expansion of
2102the abbreviation @code{'hello}.}
2103
2104The first part of the error message is straightforward; it says
2105@samp{wrong type argument}. Next comes the mysterious jargon word
2106@w{@samp{number-or-marker-p}}. This word is trying to tell you what
2107kind of argument the @code{+} expected.
2108
2109The symbol @code{number-or-marker-p} says that the Lisp interpreter is
2110trying to determine whether the information presented it (the value of
2111the argument) is a number or a marker (a special object representing a
2112buffer position). What it does is test to see whether the @code{+} is
2113being given numbers to add. It also tests to see whether the
2114argument is something called a marker, which is a specific feature of
2115Emacs Lisp. (In Emacs, locations in a buffer are recorded as markers.
2116When the mark is set with the @kbd{C-@@} or @kbd{C-@key{SPC}} command,
2117its position is kept as a marker. The mark can be considered a
2118number---the number of characters the location is from the beginning
2119of the buffer.) In Emacs Lisp, @code{+} can be used to add the
2120numeric value of marker positions as numbers.
2121
2122The @samp{p} of @code{number-or-marker-p} is the embodiment of a
2123practice started in the early days of Lisp programming. The @samp{p}
2124stands for `predicate'. In the jargon used by the early Lisp
2125researchers, a predicate refers to a function to determine whether some
2126property is true or false. So the @samp{p} tells us that
2127@code{number-or-marker-p} is the name of a function that determines
2128whether it is true or false that the argument supplied is a number or
2129a marker. Other Lisp symbols that end in @samp{p} include @code{zerop},
2130a function that tests whether its argument has the value of zero, and
2131@code{listp}, a function that tests whether its argument is a list.
2132
2133Finally, the last part of the error message is the symbol @code{hello}.
2134This is the value of the argument that was passed to @code{+}. If the
2135addition had been passed the correct type of object, the value passed
2136would have been a number, such as 37, rather than a symbol like
2137@code{hello}. But then you would not have got the error message.
2138
2139@ignore
2140@need 1250
2141In GNU Emacs version 20 and before, the echo area displays an error
2142message that says:
2143
2144@smallexample
2145Wrong type argument:@: number-or-marker-p, hello
2146@end smallexample
2147
2148This says, in different words, the same as the top line of the
2149@file{*Backtrace*} buffer.
2150@end ignore
2151
d6adf7e7 2152@node message
8cda6f8f
GM
2153@subsection The @code{message} Function
2154@findex message
2155
2156Like @code{+}, the @code{message} function takes a variable number of
2157arguments. It is used to send messages to the user and is so useful
2158that we will describe it here.
2159
2160@need 1250
2161A message is printed in the echo area. For example, you can print a
2162message in your echo area by evaluating the following list:
2163
2164@smallexample
2165(message "This message appears in the echo area!")
2166@end smallexample
2167
2168The whole string between double quotation marks is a single argument
2169and is printed @i{in toto}. (Note that in this example, the message
2170itself will appear in the echo area within double quotes; that is
2171because you see the value returned by the @code{message} function. In
2172most uses of @code{message} in programs that you write, the text will
2173be printed in the echo area as a side-effect, without the quotes.
2174@xref{multiply-by-seven in detail, , @code{multiply-by-seven} in
2175detail}, for an example of this.)
2176
2177However, if there is a @samp{%s} in the quoted string of characters, the
2178@code{message} function does not print the @samp{%s} as such, but looks
2179to the argument that follows the string. It evaluates the second
2180argument and prints the value at the location in the string where the
2181@samp{%s} is.
2182
2183@need 1250
2184You can see this by positioning the cursor after the following
2185expression and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}:
2186
2187@smallexample
2188(message "The name of this buffer is: %s." (buffer-name))
2189@end smallexample
2190
2191@noindent
2192In Info, @code{"The name of this buffer is: *info*."} will appear in the
2193echo area. The function @code{buffer-name} returns the name of the
2194buffer as a string, which the @code{message} function inserts in place
2195of @code{%s}.
2196
2197To print a value as an integer, use @samp{%d} in the same way as
2198@samp{%s}. For example, to print a message in the echo area that
2199states the value of the @code{fill-column}, evaluate the following:
2200
2201@smallexample
2202(message "The value of fill-column is %d." fill-column)
2203@end smallexample
2204
2205@noindent
2206On my system, when I evaluate this list, @code{"The value of
2207fill-column is 72."} appears in my echo area@footnote{Actually, you
2208can use @code{%s} to print a number. It is non-specific. @code{%d}
2209prints only the part of a number left of a decimal point, and not
2210anything that is not a number.}.
2211
2212If there is more than one @samp{%s} in the quoted string, the value of
2213the first argument following the quoted string is printed at the
2214location of the first @samp{%s} and the value of the second argument is
2215printed at the location of the second @samp{%s}, and so on.
2216
2217@need 1250
2218For example, if you evaluate the following,
2219
2220@smallexample
2221@group
2222(message "There are %d %s in the office!"
2223 (- fill-column 14) "pink elephants")
2224@end group
2225@end smallexample
2226
2227@noindent
2228a rather whimsical message will appear in your echo area. On my system
2229it says, @code{"There are 58 pink elephants in the office!"}.
2230
2231The expression @code{(- fill-column 14)} is evaluated and the resulting
2232number is inserted in place of the @samp{%d}; and the string in double
2233quotes, @code{"pink elephants"}, is treated as a single argument and
2234inserted in place of the @samp{%s}. (That is to say, a string between
2235double quotes evaluates to itself, like a number.)
2236
2237Finally, here is a somewhat complex example that not only illustrates
2238the computation of a number, but also shows how you can use an
2239expression within an expression to generate the text that is substituted
2240for @samp{%s}:
2241
2242@smallexample
2243@group
2244(message "He saw %d %s"
2245 (- fill-column 32)
2246 (concat "red "
2247 (substring
2248 "The quick brown foxes jumped." 16 21)
2249 " leaping."))
2250@end group
2251@end smallexample
2252
2253In this example, @code{message} has three arguments: the string,
2254@code{"He saw %d %s"}, the expression, @code{(- fill-column 32)}, and
2255the expression beginning with the function @code{concat}. The value
2256resulting from the evaluation of @code{(- fill-column 32)} is inserted
2257in place of the @samp{%d}; and the value returned by the expression
2258beginning with @code{concat} is inserted in place of the @samp{%s}.
2259
2260When your fill column is 70 and you evaluate the expression, the
2261message @code{"He saw 38 red foxes leaping."} appears in your echo
2262area.
2263
d6adf7e7 2264@node set & setq
8cda6f8f
GM
2265@section Setting the Value of a Variable
2266@cindex Variable, setting value
2267@cindex Setting value of variable
2268
2269@cindex @samp{bind} defined
2270There are several ways by which a variable can be given a value. One of
2271the ways is to use either the function @code{set} or the function
2272@code{setq}. Another way is to use @code{let} (@pxref{let}). (The
2273jargon for this process is to @dfn{bind} a variable to a value.)
2274
2275The following sections not only describe how @code{set} and @code{setq}
2276work but also illustrate how arguments are passed.
2277
2278@menu
2279* Using set:: Setting values.
2280* Using setq:: Setting a quoted value.
2281* Counting:: Using @code{setq} to count.
2282@end menu
2283
d6adf7e7 2284@node Using set
8cda6f8f
GM
2285@subsection Using @code{set}
2286@findex set
2287
2288To set the value of the symbol @code{flowers} to the list @code{'(rose
2289violet daisy buttercup)}, evaluate the following expression by
2290positioning the cursor after the expression and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}.
2291
2292@smallexample
2293(set 'flowers '(rose violet daisy buttercup))
2294@end smallexample
2295
2296@noindent
2297The list @code{(rose violet daisy buttercup)} will appear in the echo
2298area. This is what is @emph{returned} by the @code{set} function. As a
2299side effect, the symbol @code{flowers} is bound to the list; that is,
2300the symbol @code{flowers}, which can be viewed as a variable, is given
2301the list as its value. (This process, by the way, illustrates how a
2302side effect to the Lisp interpreter, setting the value, can be the
2303primary effect that we humans are interested in. This is because every
2304Lisp function must return a value if it does not get an error, but it
2305will only have a side effect if it is designed to have one.)
2306
2307After evaluating the @code{set} expression, you can evaluate the symbol
2308@code{flowers} and it will return the value you just set. Here is the
2309symbol. Place your cursor after it and type @kbd{C-x C-e}.
2310
2311@smallexample
2312flowers
2313@end smallexample
2314
2315@noindent
2316When you evaluate @code{flowers}, the list
2317@code{(rose violet daisy buttercup)} appears in the echo area.
2318
2319Incidentally, if you evaluate @code{'flowers}, the variable with a quote
2320in front of it, what you will see in the echo area is the symbol itself,
2321@code{flowers}. Here is the quoted symbol, so you can try this:
2322
2323@smallexample
2324'flowers
2325@end smallexample
2326
2327Note also, that when you use @code{set}, you need to quote both
2328arguments to @code{set}, unless you want them evaluated. Since we do
2329not want either argument evaluated, neither the variable
2330@code{flowers} nor the list @code{(rose violet daisy buttercup)}, both
2331are quoted. (When you use @code{set} without quoting its first
2332argument, the first argument is evaluated before anything else is
2333done. If you did this and @code{flowers} did not have a value
2334already, you would get an error message that the @samp{Symbol's value
2335as variable is void}; on the other hand, if @code{flowers} did return
2336a value after it was evaluated, the @code{set} would attempt to set
2337the value that was returned. There are situations where this is the
2338right thing for the function to do; but such situations are rare.)
2339
d6adf7e7 2340@node Using setq
8cda6f8f
GM
2341@subsection Using @code{setq}
2342@findex setq
2343
2344As a practical matter, you almost always quote the first argument to
2345@code{set}. The combination of @code{set} and a quoted first argument
2346is so common that it has its own name: the special form @code{setq}.
2347This special form is just like @code{set} except that the first argument
2348is quoted automatically, so you don't need to type the quote mark
2349yourself. Also, as an added convenience, @code{setq} permits you to set
2350several different variables to different values, all in one expression.
2351
2352To set the value of the variable @code{carnivores} to the list
2353@code{'(lion tiger leopard)} using @code{setq}, the following expression
2354is used:
2355
2356@smallexample
2357(setq carnivores '(lion tiger leopard))
2358@end smallexample
2359
2360@noindent
2361This is exactly the same as using @code{set} except the first argument
2362is automatically quoted by @code{setq}. (The @samp{q} in @code{setq}
2363means @code{quote}.)
2364
2365@need 1250
2366With @code{set}, the expression would look like this:
2367
2368@smallexample
2369(set 'carnivores '(lion tiger leopard))
2370@end smallexample
2371
2372Also, @code{setq} can be used to assign different values to
2373different variables. The first argument is bound to the value
2374of the second argument, the third argument is bound to the value of the
2375fourth argument, and so on. For example, you could use the following to
2376assign a list of trees to the symbol @code{trees} and a list of herbivores
2377to the symbol @code{herbivores}:
2378
2379@smallexample
2380@group
2381(setq trees '(pine fir oak maple)
2382 herbivores '(gazelle antelope zebra))
2383@end group
2384@end smallexample
2385
2386@noindent
2387(The expression could just as well have been on one line, but it might
2388not have fit on a page; and humans find it easier to read nicely
2389formatted lists.)
2390
2391Although I have been using the term `assign', there is another way of
2392thinking about the workings of @code{set} and @code{setq}; and that is to
2393say that @code{set} and @code{setq} make the symbol @emph{point} to the
2394list. This latter way of thinking is very common and in forthcoming
2395chapters we shall come upon at least one symbol that has `pointer' as
2396part of its name. The name is chosen because the symbol has a value,
2397specifically a list, attached to it; or, expressed another way,
2398the symbol is set to ``point'' to the list.
2399
d6adf7e7 2400@node Counting
8cda6f8f
GM
2401@subsection Counting
2402@cindex Counting
2403
2404Here is an example that shows how to use @code{setq} in a counter. You
2405might use this to count how many times a part of your program repeats
2406itself. First set a variable to zero; then add one to the number each
2407time the program repeats itself. To do this, you need a variable that
2408serves as a counter, and two expressions: an initial @code{setq}
2409expression that sets the counter variable to zero; and a second
2410@code{setq} expression that increments the counter each time it is
2411evaluated.
2412
2413@smallexample
2414@group
2415(setq counter 0) ; @r{Let's call this the initializer.}
2416
2417(setq counter (+ counter 1)) ; @r{This is the incrementer.}
2418
2419counter ; @r{This is the counter.}
2420@end group
2421@end smallexample
2422
2423@noindent
2424(The text following the @samp{;} are comments. @xref{Change a
2425defun, , Change a Function Definition}.)
2426
2427If you evaluate the first of these expressions, the initializer,
2428@code{(setq counter 0)}, and then evaluate the third expression,
2429@code{counter}, the number @code{0} will appear in the echo area. If
2430you then evaluate the second expression, the incrementer, @code{(setq
2431counter (+ counter 1))}, the counter will get the value 1. So if you
2432again evaluate @code{counter}, the number @code{1} will appear in the
2433echo area. Each time you evaluate the second expression, the value of
2434the counter will be incremented.
2435
2436When you evaluate the incrementer, @code{(setq counter (+ counter 1))},
2437the Lisp interpreter first evaluates the innermost list; this is the
2438addition. In order to evaluate this list, it must evaluate the variable
2439@code{counter} and the number @code{1}. When it evaluates the variable
2440@code{counter}, it receives its current value. It passes this value and
2441the number @code{1} to the @code{+} which adds them together. The sum
2442is then returned as the value of the inner list and passed to the
2443@code{setq} which sets the variable @code{counter} to this new value.
2444Thus, the value of the variable, @code{counter}, is changed.
2445
d6adf7e7 2446@node Summary
8cda6f8f
GM
2447@section Summary
2448
2449Learning Lisp is like climbing a hill in which the first part is the
2450steepest. You have now climbed the most difficult part; what remains
2451becomes easier as you progress onwards.
2452
2453@need 1000
2454In summary,
2455
2456@itemize @bullet
2457
2458@item
2459Lisp programs are made up of expressions, which are lists or single atoms.
2460
2461@item
2462Lists are made up of zero or more atoms or inner lists, separated by whitespace and
2463surrounded by parentheses. A list can be empty.
2464
2465@item
2466Atoms are multi-character symbols, like @code{forward-paragraph}, single
2467character symbols like @code{+}, strings of characters between double
2468quotation marks, or numbers.
2469
2470@item
2471A number evaluates to itself.
2472
2473@item
2474A string between double quotes also evaluates to itself.
2475
2476@item
2477When you evaluate a symbol by itself, its value is returned.
2478
2479@item
2480When you evaluate a list, the Lisp interpreter looks at the first symbol
2481in the list and then at the function definition bound to that symbol.
2482Then the instructions in the function definition are carried out.
2483
2484@item
2485A single quotation mark,
2486@ifinfo
2487'
2488@end ifinfo
2489@ifnotinfo
2490@code{'}
2491@end ifnotinfo
2492, tells the Lisp interpreter that it should
2493return the following expression as written, and not evaluate it as it
2494would if the quote were not there.
2495
2496@item
2497Arguments are the information passed to a function. The arguments to a
2498function are computed by evaluating the rest of the elements of the list
2499of which the function is the first element.
2500
2501@item
2502A function always returns a value when it is evaluated (unless it gets
2503an error); in addition, it may also carry out some action called a
2504``side effect''. In many cases, a function's primary purpose is to
2505create a side effect.
2506@end itemize
2507
d6adf7e7 2508@node Error Message Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
2509@section Exercises
2510
2511A few simple exercises:
2512
2513@itemize @bullet
2514@item
2515Generate an error message by evaluating an appropriate symbol that is
2516not within parentheses.
2517
2518@item
2519Generate an error message by evaluating an appropriate symbol that is
2520between parentheses.
2521
2522@item
2523Create a counter that increments by two rather than one.
2524
2525@item
2526Write an expression that prints a message in the echo area when
2527evaluated.
2528@end itemize
2529
d6adf7e7 2530@node Practicing Evaluation
8cda6f8f
GM
2531@chapter Practicing Evaluation
2532@cindex Practicing evaluation
2533@cindex Evaluation practice
2534
2535Before learning how to write a function definition in Emacs Lisp, it is
2536useful to spend a little time evaluating various expressions that have
2537already been written. These expressions will be lists with the
2538functions as their first (and often only) element. Since some of the
2539functions associated with buffers are both simple and interesting, we
2540will start with those. In this section, we will evaluate a few of
2541these. In another section, we will study the code of several other
2542buffer-related functions, to see how they were written.
2543
2544@menu
2545* How to Evaluate:: Typing editing commands or @kbd{C-x C-e}
2546 causes evaluation.
2547* Buffer Names:: Buffers and files are different.
2548* Getting Buffers:: Getting a buffer itself, not merely its name.
2549* Switching Buffers:: How to change to another buffer.
2550* Buffer Size & Locations:: Where point is located and the size of
2551 the buffer.
2552* Evaluation Exercise::
2553@end menu
2554
8cda6f8f 2555@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 2556@node How to Evaluate
8cda6f8f
GM
2557@unnumberedsec How to Evaluate
2558@end ifnottex
2559
2560@i{Whenever you give an editing command} to Emacs Lisp, such as the
2561command to move the cursor or to scroll the screen, @i{you are evaluating
2562an expression,} the first element of which is a function. @i{This is
2563how Emacs works.}
2564
2565@cindex @samp{interactive function} defined
2566@cindex @samp{command} defined
2567When you type keys, you cause the Lisp interpreter to evaluate an
2568expression and that is how you get your results. Even typing plain text
2569involves evaluating an Emacs Lisp function, in this case, one that uses
2570@code{self-insert-command}, which simply inserts the character you
2571typed. The functions you evaluate by typing keystrokes are called
2572@dfn{interactive} functions, or @dfn{commands}; how you make a function
2573interactive will be illustrated in the chapter on how to write function
2574definitions. @xref{Interactive, , Making a Function Interactive}.
2575
2576In addition to typing keyboard commands, we have seen a second way to
2577evaluate an expression: by positioning the cursor after a list and
2578typing @kbd{C-x C-e}. This is what we will do in the rest of this
2579section. There are other ways to evaluate an expression as well; these
2580will be described as we come to them.
2581
2582Besides being used for practicing evaluation, the functions shown in the
2583next few sections are important in their own right. A study of these
2584functions makes clear the distinction between buffers and files, how to
2585switch to a buffer, and how to determine a location within it.
2586
d6adf7e7 2587@node Buffer Names
8cda6f8f
GM
2588@section Buffer Names
2589@findex buffer-name
2590@findex buffer-file-name
2591
2592The two functions, @code{buffer-name} and @code{buffer-file-name}, show
2593the difference between a file and a buffer. When you evaluate the
2594following expression, @code{(buffer-name)}, the name of the buffer
2595appears in the echo area. When you evaluate @code{(buffer-file-name)},
2596the name of the file to which the buffer refers appears in the echo
2597area. Usually, the name returned by @code{(buffer-name)} is the same as
2598the name of the file to which it refers, and the name returned by
2599@code{(buffer-file-name)} is the full path-name of the file.
2600
2601A file and a buffer are two different entities. A file is information
2602recorded permanently in the computer (unless you delete it). A buffer,
2603on the other hand, is information inside of Emacs that will vanish at
2604the end of the editing session (or when you kill the buffer). Usually,
2605a buffer contains information that you have copied from a file; we say
2606the buffer is @dfn{visiting} that file. This copy is what you work on
2607and modify. Changes to the buffer do not change the file, until you
2608save the buffer. When you save the buffer, the buffer is copied to the file
2609and is thus saved permanently.
2610
2611@need 1250
2612If you are reading this in Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate
2613each of the following expressions by positioning the cursor after it and
2614typing @kbd{C-x C-e}.
2615
2616@example
2617@group
2618(buffer-name)
2619
2620(buffer-file-name)
2621@end group
2622@end example
2623
2624@noindent
2625When I do this in Info, the value returned by evaluating
2626@code{(buffer-name)} is @file{"*info*"}, and the value returned by
2627evaluating @code{(buffer-file-name)} is @file{nil}.
2628
a9097c6d 2629On the other hand, while I am writing this document, the value
8cda6f8f
GM
2630returned by evaluating @code{(buffer-name)} is
2631@file{"introduction.texinfo"}, and the value returned by evaluating
2632@code{(buffer-file-name)} is
2633@file{"/gnu/work/intro/introduction.texinfo"}.
2634
2635@cindex @code{nil}, history of word
2636The former is the name of the buffer and the latter is the name of the
2637file. In Info, the buffer name is @file{"*info*"}. Info does not
2638point to any file, so the result of evaluating
2639@code{(buffer-file-name)} is @file{nil}. The symbol @code{nil} is
2640from the Latin word for `nothing'; in this case, it means that the
2641buffer is not associated with any file. (In Lisp, @code{nil} is also
2642used to mean `false' and is a synonym for the empty list, @code{()}.)
2643
2644When I am writing, the name of my buffer is
2645@file{"introduction.texinfo"}. The name of the file to which it
2646points is @file{"/gnu/work/intro/introduction.texinfo"}.
2647
2648(In the expressions, the parentheses tell the Lisp interpreter to
2649treat @w{@code{buffer-name}} and @w{@code{buffer-file-name}} as
2650functions; without the parentheses, the interpreter would attempt to
2651evaluate the symbols as variables. @xref{Variables}.)
2652
2653In spite of the distinction between files and buffers, you will often
2654find that people refer to a file when they mean a buffer and vice-verse.
2655Indeed, most people say, ``I am editing a file,'' rather than saying,
2656``I am editing a buffer which I will soon save to a file.'' It is
2657almost always clear from context what people mean. When dealing with
2658computer programs, however, it is important to keep the distinction in mind,
2659since the computer is not as smart as a person.
2660
2661@cindex Buffer, history of word
2662The word `buffer', by the way, comes from the meaning of the word as a
2663cushion that deadens the force of a collision. In early computers, a
2664buffer cushioned the interaction between files and the computer's
2665central processing unit. The drums or tapes that held a file and the
2666central processing unit were pieces of equipment that were very
2667different from each other, working at their own speeds, in spurts. The
2668buffer made it possible for them to work together effectively.
2669Eventually, the buffer grew from being an intermediary, a temporary
2670holding place, to being the place where work is done. This
2671transformation is rather like that of a small seaport that grew into a
2672great city: once it was merely the place where cargo was warehoused
2673temporarily before being loaded onto ships; then it became a business
2674and cultural center in its own right.
2675
2676Not all buffers are associated with files. For example, a
2677@file{*scratch*} buffer does not visit any file. Similarly, a
2678@file{*Help*} buffer is not associated with any file.
2679
2680In the old days, when you lacked a @file{~/.emacs} file and started an
2681Emacs session by typing the command @code{emacs} alone, without naming
2682any files, Emacs started with the @file{*scratch*} buffer visible.
2683Nowadays, you will see a splash screen. You can follow one of the
2684commands suggested on the splash screen, visit a file, or press the
2685spacebar to reach the @file{*scratch*} buffer.
2686
2687If you switch to the @file{*scratch*} buffer, type
2688@code{(buffer-name)}, position the cursor after it, and then type
2689@kbd{C-x C-e} to evaluate the expression. The name @code{"*scratch*"}
2690will be returned and will appear in the echo area. @code{"*scratch*"}
2691is the name of the buffer. When you type @code{(buffer-file-name)} in
2692the @file{*scratch*} buffer and evaluate that, @code{nil} will appear
2693in the echo area, just as it does when you evaluate
2694@code{(buffer-file-name)} in Info.
2695
2696Incidentally, if you are in the @file{*scratch*} buffer and want the
2697value returned by an expression to appear in the @file{*scratch*}
2698buffer itself rather than in the echo area, type @kbd{C-u C-x C-e}
2699instead of @kbd{C-x C-e}. This causes the value returned to appear
2700after the expression. The buffer will look like this:
2701
2702@smallexample
2703(buffer-name)"*scratch*"
2704@end smallexample
2705
2706@noindent
2707You cannot do this in Info since Info is read-only and it will not allow
2708you to change the contents of the buffer. But you can do this in any
2709buffer you can edit; and when you write code or documentation (such as
2710this book), this feature is very useful.
2711
d6adf7e7 2712@node Getting Buffers
8cda6f8f
GM
2713@section Getting Buffers
2714@findex current-buffer
2715@findex other-buffer
2716@cindex Getting a buffer
2717
2718The @code{buffer-name} function returns the @emph{name} of the buffer;
2719to get the buffer @emph{itself}, a different function is needed: the
2720@code{current-buffer} function. If you use this function in code, what
2721you get is the buffer itself.
2722
2723A name and the object or entity to which the name refers are different
2724from each other. You are not your name. You are a person to whom
2725others refer by name. If you ask to speak to George and someone hands you
2726a card with the letters @samp{G}, @samp{e}, @samp{o}, @samp{r},
2727@samp{g}, and @samp{e} written on it, you might be amused, but you would
2728not be satisfied. You do not want to speak to the name, but to the
2729person to whom the name refers. A buffer is similar: the name of the
2730scratch buffer is @file{*scratch*}, but the name is not the buffer. To
2731get a buffer itself, you need to use a function such as
2732@code{current-buffer}.
2733
2734However, there is a slight complication: if you evaluate
2735@code{current-buffer} in an expression on its own, as we will do here,
2736what you see is a printed representation of the name of the buffer
2737without the contents of the buffer. Emacs works this way for two
2738reasons: the buffer may be thousands of lines long---too long to be
2739conveniently displayed; and, another buffer may have the same contents
2740but a different name, and it is important to distinguish between them.
2741
2742@need 800
2743Here is an expression containing the function:
2744
2745@smallexample
2746(current-buffer)
2747@end smallexample
2748
2749@noindent
2750If you evaluate this expression in Info in Emacs in the usual way,
2751@file{#<buffer *info*>} will appear in the echo area. The special
2752format indicates that the buffer itself is being returned, rather than
2753just its name.
2754
2755Incidentally, while you can type a number or symbol into a program, you
2756cannot do that with the printed representation of a buffer: the only way
2757to get a buffer itself is with a function such as @code{current-buffer}.
2758
2759A related function is @code{other-buffer}. This returns the most
2760recently selected buffer other than the one you are in currently, not
2761a printed representation of its name. If you have recently switched
2762back and forth from the @file{*scratch*} buffer, @code{other-buffer}
2763will return that buffer.
2764
2765@need 800
2766You can see this by evaluating the expression:
2767
2768@smallexample
2769(other-buffer)
2770@end smallexample
2771
2772@noindent
2773You should see @file{#<buffer *scratch*>} appear in the echo area, or
2774the name of whatever other buffer you switched back from most
2775recently@footnote{Actually, by default, if the buffer from which you
2776just switched is visible to you in another window, @code{other-buffer}
2777will choose the most recent buffer that you cannot see; this is a
2778subtlety that I often forget.}.
2779
d6adf7e7 2780@node Switching Buffers
8cda6f8f
GM
2781@section Switching Buffers
2782@findex switch-to-buffer
2783@findex set-buffer
2784@cindex Switching to a buffer
2785
2786The @code{other-buffer} function actually provides a buffer when it is
2787used as an argument to a function that requires one. We can see this
2788by using @code{other-buffer} and @code{switch-to-buffer} to switch to a
2789different buffer.
2790
2791But first, a brief introduction to the @code{switch-to-buffer}
2792function. When you switched back and forth from Info to the
2793@file{*scratch*} buffer to evaluate @code{(buffer-name)}, you most
2794likely typed @kbd{C-x b} and then typed @file{*scratch*}@footnote{Or
2795rather, to save typing, you probably only typed @kbd{RET} if the
2796default buffer was @file{*scratch*}, or if it was different, then you
2797typed just part of the name, such as @code{*sc}, pressed your
2798@kbd{TAB} key to cause it to expand to the full name, and then typed
8f4ea8e0 2799@kbd{RET}.} when prompted in the minibuffer for the name of
8cda6f8f
GM
2800the buffer to which you wanted to switch. The keystrokes, @kbd{C-x
2801b}, cause the Lisp interpreter to evaluate the interactive function
2802@code{switch-to-buffer}. As we said before, this is how Emacs works:
2803different keystrokes call or run different functions. For example,
2804@kbd{C-f} calls @code{forward-char}, @kbd{M-e} calls
2805@code{forward-sentence}, and so on.
2806
2807By writing @code{switch-to-buffer} in an expression, and giving it a
2808buffer to switch to, we can switch buffers just the way @kbd{C-x b}
8f4ea8e0 2809does:
8cda6f8f
GM
2810
2811@smallexample
2812(switch-to-buffer (other-buffer))
2813@end smallexample
2814
2815@noindent
2816The symbol @code{switch-to-buffer} is the first element of the list,
2817so the Lisp interpreter will treat it as a function and carry out the
2818instructions that are attached to it. But before doing that, the
2819interpreter will note that @code{other-buffer} is inside parentheses
2820and work on that symbol first. @code{other-buffer} is the first (and
2821in this case, the only) element of this list, so the Lisp interpreter
2822calls or runs the function. It returns another buffer. Next, the
2823interpreter runs @code{switch-to-buffer}, passing to it, as an
2824argument, the other buffer, which is what Emacs will switch to. If
2825you are reading this in Info, try this now. Evaluate the expression.
2826(To get back, type @kbd{C-x b @key{RET}}.)@footnote{Remember, this
2827expression will move you to your most recent other buffer that you
2828cannot see. If you really want to go to your most recently selected
2829buffer, even if you can still see it, you need to evaluate the
2830following more complex expression:
2831
2832@smallexample
2833(switch-to-buffer (other-buffer (current-buffer) t))
2834@end smallexample
2835
2836@c noindent
2837In this case, the first argument to @code{other-buffer} tells it which
2838buffer to skip---the current one---and the second argument tells
2839@code{other-buffer} it is OK to switch to a visible buffer.
2840In regular use, @code{switch-to-buffer} takes you to an invisible
2841window since you would most likely use @kbd{C-x o} (@code{other-window})
2842to go to another visible buffer.}
2843
2844In the programming examples in later sections of this document, you will
2845see the function @code{set-buffer} more often than
2846@code{switch-to-buffer}. This is because of a difference between
2847computer programs and humans: humans have eyes and expect to see the
2848buffer on which they are working on their computer terminals. This is
2849so obvious, it almost goes without saying. However, programs do not
2850have eyes. When a computer program works on a buffer, that buffer does
2851not need to be visible on the screen.
2852
2853@code{switch-to-buffer} is designed for humans and does two different
44e97401 2854things: it switches the buffer to which Emacs's attention is directed; and
8cda6f8f
GM
2855it switches the buffer displayed in the window to the new buffer.
2856@code{set-buffer}, on the other hand, does only one thing: it switches
2857the attention of the computer program to a different buffer. The buffer
2858on the screen remains unchanged (of course, normally nothing happens
2859there until the command finishes running).
2860
2861@cindex @samp{call} defined
2862Also, we have just introduced another jargon term, the word @dfn{call}.
2863When you evaluate a list in which the first symbol is a function, you
2864are calling that function. The use of the term comes from the notion of
2865the function as an entity that can do something for you if you `call'
2866it---just as a plumber is an entity who can fix a leak if you call him
2867or her.
2868
d6adf7e7 2869@node Buffer Size & Locations
8cda6f8f
GM
2870@section Buffer Size and the Location of Point
2871@cindex Size of buffer
2872@cindex Buffer size
2873@cindex Point location
2874@cindex Location of point
2875
2876Finally, let's look at several rather simple functions,
2877@code{buffer-size}, @code{point}, @code{point-min}, and
2878@code{point-max}. These give information about the size of a buffer and
2879the location of point within it.
2880
2881The function @code{buffer-size} tells you the size of the current
2882buffer; that is, the function returns a count of the number of
2883characters in the buffer.
2884
2885@smallexample
2886(buffer-size)
2887@end smallexample
2888
2889@noindent
2890You can evaluate this in the usual way, by positioning the
2891cursor after the expression and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}.
2892
2893@cindex @samp{point} defined
2894In Emacs, the current position of the cursor is called @dfn{point}.
2895The expression @code{(point)} returns a number that tells you where the
2896cursor is located as a count of the number of characters from the
2897beginning of the buffer up to point.
2898
2899@need 1250
2900You can see the character count for point in this buffer by evaluating
2901the following expression in the usual way:
2902
2903@smallexample
2904(point)
2905@end smallexample
2906
2907@noindent
2908As I write this, the value of @code{point} is 65724. The @code{point}
2909function is frequently used in some of the examples later in this
2910book.
2911
2912@need 1250
2913The value of point depends, of course, on its location within the
2914buffer. If you evaluate point in this spot, the number will be larger:
2915
2916@smallexample
2917(point)
2918@end smallexample
2919
2920@noindent
2921For me, the value of point in this location is 66043, which means that
2922there are 319 characters (including spaces) between the two
2923expressions. (Doubtless, you will see different numbers, since I will
2924have edited this since I first evaluated point.)
2925
2926@cindex @samp{narrowing} defined
2927The function @code{point-min} is somewhat similar to @code{point}, but
2928it returns the value of the minimum permissible value of point in the
2929current buffer. This is the number 1 unless @dfn{narrowing} is in
2930effect. (Narrowing is a mechanism whereby you can restrict yourself,
2931or a program, to operations on just a part of a buffer.
2932@xref{Narrowing & Widening, , Narrowing and Widening}.) Likewise, the
2933function @code{point-max} returns the value of the maximum permissible
2934value of point in the current buffer.
2935
d6adf7e7 2936@node Evaluation Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
2937@section Exercise
2938
2939Find a file with which you are working and move towards its middle.
2940Find its buffer name, file name, length, and your position in the file.
2941
d6adf7e7 2942@node Writing Defuns
8cda6f8f
GM
2943@chapter How To Write Function Definitions
2944@cindex Definition writing
2945@cindex Function definition writing
2946@cindex Writing a function definition
2947
2948When the Lisp interpreter evaluates a list, it looks to see whether the
2949first symbol on the list has a function definition attached to it; or,
2950put another way, whether the symbol points to a function definition. If
2951it does, the computer carries out the instructions in the definition. A
2952symbol that has a function definition is called, simply, a function
2953(although, properly speaking, the definition is the function and the
2954symbol refers to it.)
2955
2956@menu
2957* Primitive Functions::
edbf4569 2958* defun:: The @code{defun} macro.
8cda6f8f
GM
2959* Install:: Install a function definition.
2960* Interactive:: Making a function interactive.
2961* Interactive Options:: Different options for @code{interactive}.
2962* Permanent Installation:: Installing code permanently.
2963* let:: Creating and initializing local variables.
2964* if:: What if?
2965* else:: If--then--else expressions.
2966* Truth & Falsehood:: What Lisp considers false and true.
2967* save-excursion:: Keeping track of point, mark, and buffer.
2968* Review::
2969* defun Exercises::
2970@end menu
2971
8cda6f8f 2972@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 2973@node Primitive Functions
8cda6f8f
GM
2974@unnumberedsec An Aside about Primitive Functions
2975@end ifnottex
2976@cindex Primitive functions
2977@cindex Functions, primitive
2978
2979@cindex C language primitives
2980@cindex Primitives written in C
2981All functions are defined in terms of other functions, except for a few
2982@dfn{primitive} functions that are written in the C programming
2983language. When you write functions' definitions, you will write them in
2984Emacs Lisp and use other functions as your building blocks. Some of the
2985functions you will use will themselves be written in Emacs Lisp (perhaps
1df7defd 2986by you) and some will be primitives written in C@. The primitive
8cda6f8f
GM
2987functions are used exactly like those written in Emacs Lisp and behave
2988like them. They are written in C so we can easily run GNU Emacs on any
2989computer that has sufficient power and can run C.
2990
2991Let me re-emphasize this: when you write code in Emacs Lisp, you do not
2992distinguish between the use of functions written in C and the use of
2993functions written in Emacs Lisp. The difference is irrelevant. I
2994mention the distinction only because it is interesting to know. Indeed,
2995unless you investigate, you won't know whether an already-written
2996function is written in Emacs Lisp or C.
2997
d6adf7e7 2998@node defun
767b8eae 2999@section The @code{defun} Macro
8cda6f8f 3000@findex defun
8cda6f8f
GM
3001
3002@cindex @samp{function definition} defined
3003In Lisp, a symbol such as @code{mark-whole-buffer} has code attached to
3004it that tells the computer what to do when the function is called.
3005This code is called the @dfn{function definition} and is created by
3006evaluating a Lisp expression that starts with the symbol @code{defun}
767b8eae 3007(which is an abbreviation for @emph{define function}).
8cda6f8f
GM
3008
3009In subsequent sections, we will look at function definitions from the
3010Emacs source code, such as @code{mark-whole-buffer}. In this section,
3011we will describe a simple function definition so you can see how it
3012looks. This function definition uses arithmetic because it makes for a
3013simple example. Some people dislike examples using arithmetic; however,
3014if you are such a person, do not despair. Hardly any of the code we
3015will study in the remainder of this introduction involves arithmetic or
3016mathematics. The examples mostly involve text in one way or another.
3017
3018A function definition has up to five parts following the word
3019@code{defun}:
3020
3021@enumerate
3022@item
3023The name of the symbol to which the function definition should be
3024attached.
3025
3026@item
3027A list of the arguments that will be passed to the function. If no
3028arguments will be passed to the function, this is an empty list,
3029@code{()}.
3030
3031@item
3032Documentation describing the function. (Technically optional, but
3033strongly recommended.)
3034
3035@item
3036Optionally, an expression to make the function interactive so you can
3037use it by typing @kbd{M-x} and then the name of the function; or by
3038typing an appropriate key or keychord.
3039
3040@cindex @samp{body} defined
3041@item
3042The code that instructs the computer what to do: the @dfn{body} of the
3043function definition.
3044@end enumerate
3045
3046It is helpful to think of the five parts of a function definition as
3047being organized in a template, with slots for each part:
3048
3049@smallexample
3050@group
3051(defun @var{function-name} (@var{arguments}@dots{})
3052 "@var{optional-documentation}@dots{}"
3053 (interactive @var{argument-passing-info}) ; @r{optional}
3054 @var{body}@dots{})
3055@end group
3056@end smallexample
3057
3058As an example, here is the code for a function that multiplies its
3059argument by 7. (This example is not interactive. @xref{Interactive,
3060, Making a Function Interactive}, for that information.)
3061
3062@smallexample
3063@group
3064(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
3065 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
3066 (* 7 number))
3067@end group
3068@end smallexample
3069
3070This definition begins with a parenthesis and the symbol @code{defun},
3071followed by the name of the function.
3072
3073@cindex @samp{argument list} defined
3074The name of the function is followed by a list that contains the
3075arguments that will be passed to the function. This list is called
3076the @dfn{argument list}. In this example, the list has only one
3077element, the symbol, @code{number}. When the function is used, the
3078symbol will be bound to the value that is used as the argument to the
3079function.
3080
3081Instead of choosing the word @code{number} for the name of the argument,
3082I could have picked any other name. For example, I could have chosen
3083the word @code{multiplicand}. I picked the word `number' because it
3084tells what kind of value is intended for this slot; but I could just as
3085well have chosen the word `multiplicand' to indicate the role that the
3086value placed in this slot will play in the workings of the function. I
3087could have called it @code{foogle}, but that would have been a bad
3088choice because it would not tell humans what it means. The choice of
3089name is up to the programmer and should be chosen to make the meaning of
3090the function clear.
3091
3092Indeed, you can choose any name you wish for a symbol in an argument
3093list, even the name of a symbol used in some other function: the name
3094you use in an argument list is private to that particular definition.
3095In that definition, the name refers to a different entity than any use
3096of the same name outside the function definition. Suppose you have a
3097nick-name `Shorty' in your family; when your family members refer to
3098`Shorty', they mean you. But outside your family, in a movie, for
3099example, the name `Shorty' refers to someone else. Because a name in an
3100argument list is private to the function definition, you can change the
3101value of such a symbol inside the body of a function without changing
3102its value outside the function. The effect is similar to that produced
3103by a @code{let} expression. (@xref{let, , @code{let}}.)
3104
3105@ignore
3106Note also that we discuss the word `number' in two different ways: as a
3107symbol that appears in the code, and as the name of something that will
3108be replaced by a something else during the evaluation of the function.
3109In the first case, @code{number} is a symbol, not a number; it happens
3110that within the function, it is a variable who value is the number in
3111question, but our primary interest in it is as a symbol. On the other
3112hand, when we are talking about the function, our interest is that we
3113will substitute a number for the word @var{number}. To keep this
3114distinction clear, we use different typography for the two
3115circumstances. When we talk about this function, or about how it works,
3116we refer to this number by writing @var{number}. In the function
3117itself, we refer to it by writing @code{number}.
3118@end ignore
3119
3120The argument list is followed by the documentation string that
3121describes the function. This is what you see when you type
3122@w{@kbd{C-h f}} and the name of a function. Incidentally, when you
3123write a documentation string like this, you should make the first line
3124a complete sentence since some commands, such as @code{apropos}, print
3125only the first line of a multi-line documentation string. Also, you
3126should not indent the second line of a documentation string, if you
3127have one, because that looks odd when you use @kbd{C-h f}
3128(@code{describe-function}). The documentation string is optional, but
3129it is so useful, it should be included in almost every function you
3130write.
3131
3132@findex * @r{(multiplication)}
3133The third line of the example consists of the body of the function
3134definition. (Most functions' definitions, of course, are longer than
3135this.) In this function, the body is the list, @code{(* 7 number)}, which
3136says to multiply the value of @var{number} by 7. (In Emacs Lisp,
3137@code{*} is the function for multiplication, just as @code{+} is the
3138function for addition.)
3139
3140When you use the @code{multiply-by-seven} function, the argument
3141@code{number} evaluates to the actual number you want used. Here is an
3142example that shows how @code{multiply-by-seven} is used; but don't try
3143to evaluate this yet!
3144
3145@smallexample
3146(multiply-by-seven 3)
3147@end smallexample
3148
3149@noindent
3150The symbol @code{number}, specified in the function definition in the
3151next section, is given or ``bound to'' the value 3 in the actual use of
3152the function. Note that although @code{number} was inside parentheses
3153in the function definition, the argument passed to the
3154@code{multiply-by-seven} function is not in parentheses. The
3155parentheses are written in the function definition so the computer can
3156figure out where the argument list ends and the rest of the function
3157definition begins.
3158
3159If you evaluate this example, you are likely to get an error message.
3160(Go ahead, try it!) This is because we have written the function
3161definition, but not yet told the computer about the definition---we have
3162not yet installed (or `loaded') the function definition in Emacs.
3163Installing a function is the process that tells the Lisp interpreter the
3164definition of the function. Installation is described in the next
3165section.
3166
d6adf7e7 3167@node Install
8cda6f8f
GM
3168@section Install a Function Definition
3169@cindex Install a Function Definition
3170@cindex Definition installation
3171@cindex Function definition installation
3172
3173If you are reading this inside of Info in Emacs, you can try out the
3174@code{multiply-by-seven} function by first evaluating the function
3175definition and then evaluating @code{(multiply-by-seven 3)}. A copy of
3176the function definition follows. Place the cursor after the last
3177parenthesis of the function definition and type @kbd{C-x C-e}. When you
3178do this, @code{multiply-by-seven} will appear in the echo area. (What
3179this means is that when a function definition is evaluated, the value it
3180returns is the name of the defined function.) At the same time, this
3181action installs the function definition.
3182
3183@smallexample
3184@group
3185(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
3186 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
3187 (* 7 number))
3188@end group
3189@end smallexample
3190
3191@noindent
3192By evaluating this @code{defun}, you have just installed
3193@code{multiply-by-seven} in Emacs. The function is now just as much a
3194part of Emacs as @code{forward-word} or any other editing function you
3195use. (@code{multiply-by-seven} will stay installed until you quit
3196Emacs. To reload code automatically whenever you start Emacs, see
3197@ref{Permanent Installation, , Installing Code Permanently}.)
3198
3199@menu
3200* Effect of installation::
3201* Change a defun:: How to change a function definition.
3202@end menu
3203
8cda6f8f 3204@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 3205@node Effect of installation
8cda6f8f
GM
3206@unnumberedsubsec The effect of installation
3207@end ifnottex
3208
3209You can see the effect of installing @code{multiply-by-seven} by
3210evaluating the following sample. Place the cursor after the following
3211expression and type @kbd{C-x C-e}. The number 21 will appear in the
3212echo area.
3213
3214@smallexample
3215(multiply-by-seven 3)
3216@end smallexample
3217
3218If you wish, you can read the documentation for the function by typing
3219@kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}) and then the name of the
3220function, @code{multiply-by-seven}. When you do this, a
3221@file{*Help*} window will appear on your screen that says:
3222
3223@smallexample
3224@group
3225multiply-by-seven is a Lisp function.
3226(multiply-by-seven NUMBER)
3227
3228Multiply NUMBER by seven.
3229@end group
3230@end smallexample
3231
3232@noindent
3233(To return to a single window on your screen, type @kbd{C-x 1}.)
3234
d6adf7e7 3235@node Change a defun
8cda6f8f
GM
3236@subsection Change a Function Definition
3237@cindex Changing a function definition
3238@cindex Function definition, how to change
3239@cindex Definition, how to change
3240
3241If you want to change the code in @code{multiply-by-seven}, just rewrite
3242it. To install the new version in place of the old one, evaluate the
3243function definition again. This is how you modify code in Emacs. It is
3244very simple.
3245
3246As an example, you can change the @code{multiply-by-seven} function to
3247add the number to itself seven times instead of multiplying the number
3248by seven. It produces the same answer, but by a different path. At
3249the same time, we will add a comment to the code; a comment is text
3250that the Lisp interpreter ignores, but that a human reader may find
3251useful or enlightening. The comment is that this is the ``second
3252version''.
3253
3254@smallexample
3255@group
3256(defun multiply-by-seven (number) ; @r{Second version.}
3257 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
3258 (+ number number number number number number number))
3259@end group
3260@end smallexample
3261
3262@cindex Comments in Lisp code
3263The comment follows a semicolon, @samp{;}. In Lisp, everything on a
3264line that follows a semicolon is a comment. The end of the line is the
3265end of the comment. To stretch a comment over two or more lines, begin
3266each line with a semicolon.
3267
3268@xref{Beginning a .emacs File, , Beginning a @file{.emacs}
3269File}, and @ref{Comments, , Comments, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
3270Reference Manual}, for more about comments.
3271
3272You can install this version of the @code{multiply-by-seven} function by
3273evaluating it in the same way you evaluated the first function: place
3274the cursor after the last parenthesis and type @kbd{C-x C-e}.
3275
3276In summary, this is how you write code in Emacs Lisp: you write a
3277function; install it; test it; and then make fixes or enhancements and
3278install it again.
3279
d6adf7e7 3280@node Interactive
8cda6f8f
GM
3281@section Make a Function Interactive
3282@cindex Interactive functions
3283@findex interactive
3284
3285You make a function interactive by placing a list that begins with
3286the special form @code{interactive} immediately after the
3287documentation. A user can invoke an interactive function by typing
3288@kbd{M-x} and then the name of the function; or by typing the keys to
3289which it is bound, for example, by typing @kbd{C-n} for
3290@code{next-line} or @kbd{C-x h} for @code{mark-whole-buffer}.
3291
3292Interestingly, when you call an interactive function interactively,
3293the value returned is not automatically displayed in the echo area.
3294This is because you often call an interactive function for its side
3295effects, such as moving forward by a word or line, and not for the
3296value returned. If the returned value were displayed in the echo area
3297each time you typed a key, it would be very distracting.
3298
3299@menu
3300* Interactive multiply-by-seven:: An overview.
3301* multiply-by-seven in detail:: The interactive version.
3302@end menu
3303
8cda6f8f 3304@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 3305@node Interactive multiply-by-seven
8cda6f8f
GM
3306@unnumberedsubsec An Interactive @code{multiply-by-seven}, An Overview
3307@end ifnottex
3308
3309Both the use of the special form @code{interactive} and one way to
3310display a value in the echo area can be illustrated by creating an
3311interactive version of @code{multiply-by-seven}.
3312
3313@need 1250
3314Here is the code:
3315
3316@smallexample
3317@group
3318(defun multiply-by-seven (number) ; @r{Interactive version.}
3319 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
3320 (interactive "p")
3321 (message "The result is %d" (* 7 number)))
3322@end group
3323@end smallexample
3324
3325@noindent
3326You can install this code by placing your cursor after it and typing
3327@kbd{C-x C-e}. The name of the function will appear in your echo area.
3328Then, you can use this code by typing @kbd{C-u} and a number and then
3329typing @kbd{M-x multiply-by-seven} and pressing @key{RET}. The phrase
3330@samp{The result is @dots{}} followed by the product will appear in the
3331echo area.
3332
3333Speaking more generally, you invoke a function like this in either of two
3334ways:
3335
3336@enumerate
3337@item
3338By typing a prefix argument that contains the number to be passed, and
3339then typing @kbd{M-x} and the name of the function, as with
3340@kbd{C-u 3 M-x forward-sentence}; or,
3341
3342@item
3343By typing whatever key or keychord the function is bound to, as with
3344@kbd{C-u 3 M-e}.
3345@end enumerate
3346
3347@noindent
3348Both the examples just mentioned work identically to move point forward
3349three sentences. (Since @code{multiply-by-seven} is not bound to a key,
3350it could not be used as an example of key binding.)
3351
3352(@xref{Keybindings, , Some Keybindings}, to learn how to bind a command
3353to a key.)
3354
3355A prefix argument is passed to an interactive function by typing the
3356@key{META} key followed by a number, for example, @kbd{M-3 M-e}, or by
3357typing @kbd{C-u} and then a number, for example, @kbd{C-u 3 M-e} (if you
3358type @kbd{C-u} without a number, it defaults to 4).
3359
d6adf7e7 3360@node multiply-by-seven in detail
8cda6f8f
GM
3361@subsection An Interactive @code{multiply-by-seven}
3362
3363Let's look at the use of the special form @code{interactive} and then at
3364the function @code{message} in the interactive version of
3365@code{multiply-by-seven}. You will recall that the function definition
3366looks like this:
3367
3368@smallexample
3369@group
3370(defun multiply-by-seven (number) ; @r{Interactive version.}
3371 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
3372 (interactive "p")
3373 (message "The result is %d" (* 7 number)))
3374@end group
3375@end smallexample
3376
3377In this function, the expression, @code{(interactive "p")}, is a list of
3378two elements. The @code{"p"} tells Emacs to pass the prefix argument to
3379the function and use its value for the argument of the function.
3380
3381@need 1000
3382The argument will be a number. This means that the symbol
3383@code{number} will be bound to a number in the line:
3384
3385@smallexample
3386(message "The result is %d" (* 7 number))
3387@end smallexample
3388
3389@need 1250
3390@noindent
3391For example, if your prefix argument is 5, the Lisp interpreter will
3392evaluate the line as if it were:
3393
3394@smallexample
3395(message "The result is %d" (* 7 5))
3396@end smallexample
3397
3398@noindent
3399(If you are reading this in GNU Emacs, you can evaluate this expression
3400yourself.) First, the interpreter will evaluate the inner list, which
3401is @code{(* 7 5)}. This returns a value of 35. Next, it
3402will evaluate the outer list, passing the values of the second and
3403subsequent elements of the list to the function @code{message}.
3404
3405As we have seen, @code{message} is an Emacs Lisp function especially
3406designed for sending a one line message to a user. (@xref{message, ,
3407The @code{message} function}.) In summary, the @code{message}
3408function prints its first argument in the echo area as is, except for
3409occurrences of @samp{%d} or @samp{%s} (and various other %-sequences
3410which we have not mentioned). When it sees a control sequence, the
3411function looks to the second or subsequent arguments and prints the
3412value of the argument in the location in the string where the control
3413sequence is located.
3414
3415In the interactive @code{multiply-by-seven} function, the control string
3416is @samp{%d}, which requires a number, and the value returned by
3417evaluating @code{(* 7 5)} is the number 35. Consequently, the number 35
3418is printed in place of the @samp{%d} and the message is @samp{The result
3419is 35}.
3420
3421(Note that when you call the function @code{multiply-by-seven}, the
3422message is printed without quotes, but when you call @code{message}, the
3423text is printed in double quotes. This is because the value returned by
3424@code{message} is what appears in the echo area when you evaluate an
3425expression whose first element is @code{message}; but when embedded in a
3426function, @code{message} prints the text as a side effect without
3427quotes.)
3428
d6adf7e7 3429@node Interactive Options
8cda6f8f
GM
3430@section Different Options for @code{interactive}
3431@cindex Options for @code{interactive}
3432@cindex Interactive options
3433
3434In the example, @code{multiply-by-seven} used @code{"p"} as the
3435argument to @code{interactive}. This argument told Emacs to interpret
3436your typing either @kbd{C-u} followed by a number or @key{META}
3437followed by a number as a command to pass that number to the function
3438as its argument. Emacs has more than twenty characters predefined for
3439use with @code{interactive}. In almost every case, one of these
3440options will enable you to pass the right information interactively to
3441a function. (@xref{Interactive Codes, , Code Characters for
3442@code{interactive}, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.)
3443
3444@need 1250
3445Consider the function @code{zap-to-char}. Its interactive expression
3446is
3447
3448@smallexample
3449(interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
3450@end smallexample
3451
3452The first part of the argument to @code{interactive} is @samp{p}, with
3453which you are already familiar. This argument tells Emacs to
3454interpret a `prefix', as a number to be passed to the function. You
3455can specify a prefix either by typing @kbd{C-u} followed by a number
3456or by typing @key{META} followed by a number. The prefix is the
3457number of specified characters. Thus, if your prefix is three and the
3458specified character is @samp{x}, then you will delete all the text up
3459to and including the third next @samp{x}. If you do not set a prefix,
3460then you delete all the text up to and including the specified
3461character, but no more.
3462
3463The @samp{c} tells the function the name of the character to which to delete.
3464
3465More formally, a function with two or more arguments can have
3466information passed to each argument by adding parts to the string that
3467follows @code{interactive}. When you do this, the information is
3468passed to each argument in the same order it is specified in the
3469@code{interactive} list. In the string, each part is separated from
3470the next part by a @samp{\n}, which is a newline. For example, you
3471can follow @samp{p} with a @samp{\n} and an @samp{cZap to char:@: }.
3472This causes Emacs to pass the value of the prefix argument (if there
3473is one) and the character.
3474
3475In this case, the function definition looks like the following, where
3476@code{arg} and @code{char} are the symbols to which @code{interactive}
3477binds the prefix argument and the specified character:
3478
3479@smallexample
3480@group
3481(defun @var{name-of-function} (arg char)
3482 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
3483 (interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
3484 @var{body-of-function}@dots{})
3485@end group
3486@end smallexample
3487
3488@noindent
3489(The space after the colon in the prompt makes it look better when you
3490are prompted. @xref{copy-to-buffer, , The Definition of
3491@code{copy-to-buffer}}, for an example.)
3492
3493When a function does not take arguments, @code{interactive} does not
3494require any. Such a function contains the simple expression
3495@code{(interactive)}. The @code{mark-whole-buffer} function is like
3496this.
3497
3498Alternatively, if the special letter-codes are not right for your
3499application, you can pass your own arguments to @code{interactive} as
3500a list.
3501
3502@xref{append-to-buffer, , The Definition of @code{append-to-buffer}},
3503for an example. @xref{Using Interactive, , Using @code{Interactive},
3504elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for a more complete
3505explanation about this technique.
3506
d6adf7e7 3507@node Permanent Installation
8cda6f8f
GM
3508@section Install Code Permanently
3509@cindex Install code permanently
3510@cindex Permanent code installation
3511@cindex Code installation
3512
3513When you install a function definition by evaluating it, it will stay
3514installed until you quit Emacs. The next time you start a new session
3515of Emacs, the function will not be installed unless you evaluate the
3516function definition again.
3517
3518At some point, you may want to have code installed automatically
3519whenever you start a new session of Emacs. There are several ways of
3520doing this:
3521
3522@itemize @bullet
3523@item
3524If you have code that is just for yourself, you can put the code for the
3525function definition in your @file{.emacs} initialization file. When you
3526start Emacs, your @file{.emacs} file is automatically evaluated and all
3527the function definitions within it are installed.
3528@xref{Emacs Initialization, , Your @file{.emacs} File}.
3529
3530@item
3531Alternatively, you can put the function definitions that you want
3532installed in one or more files of their own and use the @code{load}
3533function to cause Emacs to evaluate and thereby install each of the
3534functions in the files.
3535@xref{Loading Files, , Loading Files}.
3536
3537@item
3538Thirdly, if you have code that your whole site will use, it is usual
3539to put it in a file called @file{site-init.el} that is loaded when
3540Emacs is built. This makes the code available to everyone who uses
3541your machine. (See the @file{INSTALL} file that is part of the Emacs
3542distribution.)
3543@end itemize
3544
3545Finally, if you have code that everyone who uses Emacs may want, you
3546can post it on a computer network or send a copy to the Free Software
3547Foundation. (When you do this, please license the code and its
3548documentation under a license that permits other people to run, copy,
3549study, modify, and redistribute the code and which protects you from
3550having your work taken from you.) If you send a copy of your code to
3551the Free Software Foundation, and properly protect yourself and
3552others, it may be included in the next release of Emacs. In large
3553part, this is how Emacs has grown over the past years, by donations.
3554
d6adf7e7 3555@node let
8cda6f8f
GM
3556@section @code{let}
3557@findex let
3558
3559The @code{let} expression is a special form in Lisp that you will need
3560to use in most function definitions.
3561
3562@code{let} is used to attach or bind a symbol to a value in such a way
3563that the Lisp interpreter will not confuse the variable with a
3564variable of the same name that is not part of the function.
3565
3566To understand why the @code{let} special form is necessary, consider
3567the situation in which you own a home that you generally refer to as
3568`the house', as in the sentence, ``The house needs painting.'' If you
3569are visiting a friend and your host refers to `the house', he is
3570likely to be referring to @emph{his} house, not yours, that is, to a
3571different house.
3572
3573If your friend is referring to his house and you think he is referring
3574to your house, you may be in for some confusion. The same thing could
3575happen in Lisp if a variable that is used inside of one function has
3576the same name as a variable that is used inside of another function,
3577and the two are not intended to refer to the same value. The
3578@code{let} special form prevents this kind of confusion.
3579
3580@menu
3581* Prevent confusion::
3582* Parts of let Expression::
3583* Sample let Expression::
3584* Uninitialized let Variables::
3585@end menu
3586
8cda6f8f 3587@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 3588@node Prevent confusion
8cda6f8f
GM
3589@unnumberedsubsec @code{let} Prevents Confusion
3590@end ifnottex
3591
3592@cindex @samp{local variable} defined
3593@cindex @samp{variable, local}, defined
3594The @code{let} special form prevents confusion. @code{let} creates a
3595name for a @dfn{local variable} that overshadows any use of the same
3596name outside the @code{let} expression. This is like understanding
3597that whenever your host refers to `the house', he means his house, not
3598yours. (Symbols used in argument lists work the same way.
edbf4569 3599@xref{defun, , The @code{defun} Macro}.)
8cda6f8f
GM
3600
3601Local variables created by a @code{let} expression retain their value
3602@emph{only} within the @code{let} expression itself (and within
3603expressions called within the @code{let} expression); the local
3604variables have no effect outside the @code{let} expression.
3605
3606Another way to think about @code{let} is that it is like a @code{setq}
3607that is temporary and local. The values set by @code{let} are
3608automatically undone when the @code{let} is finished. The setting
3609only affects expressions that are inside the bounds of the @code{let}
3610expression. In computer science jargon, we would say ``the binding of
3611a symbol is visible only in functions called in the @code{let} form;
3612in Emacs Lisp, scoping is dynamic, not lexical.''
3613
3614@code{let} can create more than one variable at once. Also,
3615@code{let} gives each variable it creates an initial value, either a
3616value specified by you, or @code{nil}. (In the jargon, this is called
3617`binding the variable to the value'.) After @code{let} has created
3618and bound the variables, it executes the code in the body of the
3619@code{let}, and returns the value of the last expression in the body,
3620as the value of the whole @code{let} expression. (`Execute' is a jargon
3621term that means to evaluate a list; it comes from the use of the word
3622meaning `to give practical effect to' (@cite{Oxford English
3623Dictionary}). Since you evaluate an expression to perform an action,
3624`execute' has evolved as a synonym to `evaluate'.)
3625
d6adf7e7 3626@node Parts of let Expression
8cda6f8f
GM
3627@subsection The Parts of a @code{let} Expression
3628@cindex @code{let} expression, parts of
3629@cindex Parts of @code{let} expression
3630
3631@cindex @samp{varlist} defined
3632A @code{let} expression is a list of three parts. The first part is
3633the symbol @code{let}. The second part is a list, called a
3634@dfn{varlist}, each element of which is either a symbol by itself or a
3635two-element list, the first element of which is a symbol. The third
3636part of the @code{let} expression is the body of the @code{let}. The
3637body usually consists of one or more lists.
3638
3639@need 800
3640A template for a @code{let} expression looks like this:
3641
3642@smallexample
3643(let @var{varlist} @var{body}@dots{})
3644@end smallexample
3645
3646@noindent
3647The symbols in the varlist are the variables that are given initial
3648values by the @code{let} special form. Symbols by themselves are given
3649the initial value of @code{nil}; and each symbol that is the first
3650element of a two-element list is bound to the value that is returned
3651when the Lisp interpreter evaluates the second element.
3652
3653Thus, a varlist might look like this: @code{(thread (needles 3))}. In
3654this case, in a @code{let} expression, Emacs binds the symbol
3655@code{thread} to an initial value of @code{nil}, and binds the symbol
3656@code{needles} to an initial value of 3.
3657
3658When you write a @code{let} expression, what you do is put the
3659appropriate expressions in the slots of the @code{let} expression
3660template.
3661
3662If the varlist is composed of two-element lists, as is often the case,
3663the template for the @code{let} expression looks like this:
3664
3665@smallexample
3666@group
3667(let ((@var{variable} @var{value})
3668 (@var{variable} @var{value})
3669 @dots{})
3670 @var{body}@dots{})
3671@end group
3672@end smallexample
3673
d6adf7e7 3674@node Sample let Expression
8cda6f8f
GM
3675@subsection Sample @code{let} Expression
3676@cindex Sample @code{let} expression
3677@cindex @code{let} expression sample
3678
3679The following expression creates and gives initial values
3680to the two variables @code{zebra} and @code{tiger}. The body of the
3681@code{let} expression is a list which calls the @code{message} function.
3682
3683@smallexample
3684@group
3685(let ((zebra 'stripes)
3686 (tiger 'fierce))
3687 (message "One kind of animal has %s and another is %s."
3688 zebra tiger))
3689@end group
3690@end smallexample
3691
3692Here, the varlist is @code{((zebra 'stripes) (tiger 'fierce))}.
3693
3694The two variables are @code{zebra} and @code{tiger}. Each variable is
3695the first element of a two-element list and each value is the second
3696element of its two-element list. In the varlist, Emacs binds the
3697variable @code{zebra} to the value @code{stripes}@footnote{According
3698to Jared Diamond in @cite{Guns, Germs, and Steel}, ``@dots{} zebras
3699become impossibly dangerous as they grow older'' but the claim here is
3700that they do not become fierce like a tiger. (1997, W. W. Norton and
3701Co., ISBN 0-393-03894-2, page 171)}, and binds the
3702variable @code{tiger} to the value @code{fierce}. In this example,
3703both values are symbols preceded by a quote. The values could just as
3704well have been another list or a string. The body of the @code{let}
3705follows after the list holding the variables. In this example, the
3706body is a list that uses the @code{message} function to print a string
3707in the echo area.
3708
3709@need 1500
3710You may evaluate the example in the usual fashion, by placing the
3711cursor after the last parenthesis and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}. When you do
3712this, the following will appear in the echo area:
3713
3714@smallexample
3715"One kind of animal has stripes and another is fierce."
3716@end smallexample
3717
3718As we have seen before, the @code{message} function prints its first
3719argument, except for @samp{%s}. In this example, the value of the variable
3720@code{zebra} is printed at the location of the first @samp{%s} and the
3721value of the variable @code{tiger} is printed at the location of the
3722second @samp{%s}.
3723
d6adf7e7 3724@node Uninitialized let Variables
8cda6f8f
GM
3725@subsection Uninitialized Variables in a @code{let} Statement
3726@cindex Uninitialized @code{let} variables
3727@cindex @code{let} variables uninitialized
3728
3729If you do not bind the variables in a @code{let} statement to specific
3730initial values, they will automatically be bound to an initial value of
3731@code{nil}, as in the following expression:
3732
3733@smallexample
3734@group
3735(let ((birch 3)
3736 pine
3737 fir
3738 (oak 'some))
3739 (message
3740 "Here are %d variables with %s, %s, and %s value."
3741 birch pine fir oak))
3742@end group
3743@end smallexample
3744
3745@noindent
3746Here, the varlist is @code{((birch 3) pine fir (oak 'some))}.
3747
3748@need 1250
3749If you evaluate this expression in the usual way, the following will
3750appear in your echo area:
3751
3752@smallexample
3753"Here are 3 variables with nil, nil, and some value."
3754@end smallexample
3755
3756@noindent
3757In this example, Emacs binds the symbol @code{birch} to the number 3,
3758binds the symbols @code{pine} and @code{fir} to @code{nil}, and binds
3759the symbol @code{oak} to the value @code{some}.
3760
3761Note that in the first part of the @code{let}, the variables @code{pine}
3762and @code{fir} stand alone as atoms that are not surrounded by
3763parentheses; this is because they are being bound to @code{nil}, the
3764empty list. But @code{oak} is bound to @code{some} and so is a part of
3765the list @code{(oak 'some)}. Similarly, @code{birch} is bound to the
3766number 3 and so is in a list with that number. (Since a number
3767evaluates to itself, the number does not need to be quoted. Also, the
3768number is printed in the message using a @samp{%d} rather than a
3769@samp{%s}.) The four variables as a group are put into a list to
3770delimit them from the body of the @code{let}.
3771
d6adf7e7 3772@node if
8cda6f8f
GM
3773@section The @code{if} Special Form
3774@findex if
3775@cindex Conditional with @code{if}
3776
3777A third special form, in addition to @code{defun} and @code{let}, is the
3778conditional @code{if}. This form is used to instruct the computer to
3779make decisions. You can write function definitions without using
3780@code{if}, but it is used often enough, and is important enough, to be
3781included here. It is used, for example, in the code for the
3782function @code{beginning-of-buffer}.
3783
3784The basic idea behind an @code{if}, is that ``@emph{if} a test is true,
3785@emph{then} an expression is evaluated.'' If the test is not true, the
3786expression is not evaluated. For example, you might make a decision
3787such as, ``if it is warm and sunny, then go to the beach!''
3788
3789@menu
3790* if in more detail::
3791* type-of-animal in detail:: An example of an @code{if} expression.
3792@end menu
3793
8cda6f8f 3794@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 3795@node if in more detail
8cda6f8f
GM
3796@unnumberedsubsec @code{if} in more detail
3797@end ifnottex
3798
3799@cindex @samp{if-part} defined
3800@cindex @samp{then-part} defined
3801An @code{if} expression written in Lisp does not use the word `then';
3802the test and the action are the second and third elements of the list
3803whose first element is @code{if}. Nonetheless, the test part of an
3804@code{if} expression is often called the @dfn{if-part} and the second
3805argument is often called the @dfn{then-part}.
3806
3807Also, when an @code{if} expression is written, the true-or-false-test
3808is usually written on the same line as the symbol @code{if}, but the
3809action to carry out if the test is true, the ``then-part'', is written
3810on the second and subsequent lines. This makes the @code{if}
3811expression easier to read.
3812
3813@smallexample
3814@group
3815(if @var{true-or-false-test}
3816 @var{action-to-carry-out-if-test-is-true})
3817@end group
3818@end smallexample
3819
3820@noindent
3821The true-or-false-test will be an expression that
3822is evaluated by the Lisp interpreter.
3823
3824Here is an example that you can evaluate in the usual manner. The test
3825is whether the number 5 is greater than the number 4. Since it is, the
3826message @samp{5 is greater than 4!} will be printed.
3827
3828@smallexample
3829@group
3830(if (> 5 4) ; @r{if-part}
3831 (message "5 is greater than 4!")) ; @r{then-part}
3832@end group
3833@end smallexample
3834
3835@noindent
3836(The function @code{>} tests whether its first argument is greater than
3837its second argument and returns true if it is.)
3838@findex > (greater than)
3839
3840Of course, in actual use, the test in an @code{if} expression will not
3841be fixed for all time as it is by the expression @code{(> 5 4)}.
3842Instead, at least one of the variables used in the test will be bound to
3843a value that is not known ahead of time. (If the value were known ahead
3844of time, we would not need to run the test!)
3845
3846For example, the value may be bound to an argument of a function
3847definition. In the following function definition, the character of the
3848animal is a value that is passed to the function. If the value bound to
3849@code{characteristic} is @code{fierce}, then the message, @samp{It's a
3850tiger!} will be printed; otherwise, @code{nil} will be returned.
3851
3852@smallexample
3853@group
3854(defun type-of-animal (characteristic)
3855 "Print message in echo area depending on CHARACTERISTIC.
3856If the CHARACTERISTIC is the symbol `fierce',
3857then warn of a tiger."
3858 (if (equal characteristic 'fierce)
3859 (message "It's a tiger!")))
3860@end group
3861@end smallexample
3862
3863@need 1500
3864@noindent
3865If you are reading this inside of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate the
3866function definition in the usual way to install it in Emacs, and then you
3867can evaluate the following two expressions to see the results:
3868
3869@smallexample
3870@group
3871(type-of-animal 'fierce)
3872
3873(type-of-animal 'zebra)
3874
3875@end group
3876@end smallexample
3877
3878@c Following sentences rewritten to prevent overfull hbox.
3879@noindent
3880When you evaluate @code{(type-of-animal 'fierce)}, you will see the
3881following message printed in the echo area: @code{"It's a tiger!"}; and
3882when you evaluate @code{(type-of-animal 'zebra)} you will see @code{nil}
3883printed in the echo area.
3884
d6adf7e7 3885@node type-of-animal in detail
8cda6f8f
GM
3886@subsection The @code{type-of-animal} Function in Detail
3887
3888Let's look at the @code{type-of-animal} function in detail.
3889
3890The function definition for @code{type-of-animal} was written by filling
3891the slots of two templates, one for a function definition as a whole, and
3892a second for an @code{if} expression.
3893
3894@need 1250
3895The template for every function that is not interactive is:
3896
3897@smallexample
3898@group
3899(defun @var{name-of-function} (@var{argument-list})
3900 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
3901 @var{body}@dots{})
3902@end group
3903@end smallexample
3904
3905@need 800
3906The parts of the function that match this template look like this:
3907
3908@smallexample
3909@group
3910(defun type-of-animal (characteristic)
3911 "Print message in echo area depending on CHARACTERISTIC.
3912If the CHARACTERISTIC is the symbol `fierce',
3913then warn of a tiger."
3914 @var{body: the} @code{if} @var{expression})
3915@end group
3916@end smallexample
3917
3918The name of function is @code{type-of-animal}; it is passed the value
3919of one argument. The argument list is followed by a multi-line
3920documentation string. The documentation string is included in the
3921example because it is a good habit to write documentation string for
3922every function definition. The body of the function definition
3923consists of the @code{if} expression.
3924
3925@need 800
3926The template for an @code{if} expression looks like this:
3927
3928@smallexample
3929@group
3930(if @var{true-or-false-test}
3931 @var{action-to-carry-out-if-the-test-returns-true})
3932@end group
3933@end smallexample
3934
3935@need 1250
3936In the @code{type-of-animal} function, the code for the @code{if}
3937looks like this:
3938
3939@smallexample
3940@group
3941(if (equal characteristic 'fierce)
3942 (message "It's a tiger!")))
3943@end group
3944@end smallexample
3945
3946@need 800
3947Here, the true-or-false-test is the expression:
3948
3949@smallexample
3950(equal characteristic 'fierce)
3951@end smallexample
3952
3953@noindent
3954In Lisp, @code{equal} is a function that determines whether its first
3955argument is equal to its second argument. The second argument is the
3956quoted symbol @code{'fierce} and the first argument is the value of the
3957symbol @code{characteristic}---in other words, the argument passed to
3958this function.
3959
3960In the first exercise of @code{type-of-animal}, the argument
3961@code{fierce} is passed to @code{type-of-animal}. Since @code{fierce}
3962is equal to @code{fierce}, the expression, @code{(equal characteristic
3963'fierce)}, returns a value of true. When this happens, the @code{if}
3964evaluates the second argument or then-part of the @code{if}:
3965@code{(message "It's tiger!")}.
3966
3967On the other hand, in the second exercise of @code{type-of-animal}, the
3968argument @code{zebra} is passed to @code{type-of-animal}. @code{zebra}
3969is not equal to @code{fierce}, so the then-part is not evaluated and
3970@code{nil} is returned by the @code{if} expression.
3971
d6adf7e7 3972@node else
8cda6f8f
GM
3973@section If--then--else Expressions
3974@cindex Else
3975
3976An @code{if} expression may have an optional third argument, called
3977the @dfn{else-part}, for the case when the true-or-false-test returns
3978false. When this happens, the second argument or then-part of the
3979overall @code{if} expression is @emph{not} evaluated, but the third or
3980else-part @emph{is} evaluated. You might think of this as the cloudy
3981day alternative for the decision ``if it is warm and sunny, then go to
3982the beach, else read a book!''.
3983
3984The word ``else'' is not written in the Lisp code; the else-part of an
3985@code{if} expression comes after the then-part. In the written Lisp, the
3986else-part is usually written to start on a line of its own and is
3987indented less than the then-part:
3988
3989@smallexample
3990@group
3991(if @var{true-or-false-test}
3992 @var{action-to-carry-out-if-the-test-returns-true}
3993 @var{action-to-carry-out-if-the-test-returns-false})
3994@end group
3995@end smallexample
3996
3997For example, the following @code{if} expression prints the message @samp{4
3998is not greater than 5!} when you evaluate it in the usual way:
3999
4000@smallexample
4001@group
4002(if (> 4 5) ; @r{if-part}
4003 (message "4 falsely greater than 5!") ; @r{then-part}
4004 (message "4 is not greater than 5!")) ; @r{else-part}
4005@end group
4006@end smallexample
4007
4008@noindent
4009Note that the different levels of indentation make it easy to
4010distinguish the then-part from the else-part. (GNU Emacs has several
4011commands that automatically indent @code{if} expressions correctly.
4012@xref{Typing Lists, , GNU Emacs Helps You Type Lists}.)
4013
4014We can extend the @code{type-of-animal} function to include an
4015else-part by simply incorporating an additional part to the @code{if}
4016expression.
4017
4018@need 1500
4019You can see the consequences of doing this if you evaluate the following
4020version of the @code{type-of-animal} function definition to install it
4021and then evaluate the two subsequent expressions to pass different
4022arguments to the function.
4023
4024@smallexample
4025@group
4026(defun type-of-animal (characteristic) ; @r{Second version.}
4027 "Print message in echo area depending on CHARACTERISTIC.
4028If the CHARACTERISTIC is the symbol `fierce',
4029then warn of a tiger;
4030else say it's not fierce."
4031 (if (equal characteristic 'fierce)
4032 (message "It's a tiger!")
4033 (message "It's not fierce!")))
4034@end group
4035@end smallexample
4036@sp 1
4037
4038@smallexample
4039@group
4040(type-of-animal 'fierce)
4041
4042(type-of-animal 'zebra)
4043
4044@end group
4045@end smallexample
4046
4047@c Following sentence rewritten to prevent overfull hbox.
4048@noindent
4049When you evaluate @code{(type-of-animal 'fierce)}, you will see the
4050following message printed in the echo area: @code{"It's a tiger!"}; but
4051when you evaluate @code{(type-of-animal 'zebra)}, you will see
4052@code{"It's not fierce!"}.
4053
4054(Of course, if the @var{characteristic} were @code{ferocious}, the
4055message @code{"It's not fierce!"} would be printed; and it would be
4056misleading! When you write code, you need to take into account the
4057possibility that some such argument will be tested by the @code{if}
4058and write your program accordingly.)
4059
d6adf7e7 4060@node Truth & Falsehood
8cda6f8f
GM
4061@section Truth and Falsehood in Emacs Lisp
4062@cindex Truth and falsehood in Emacs Lisp
4063@cindex Falsehood and truth in Emacs Lisp
4064@findex nil
4065
4066There is an important aspect to the truth test in an @code{if}
4067expression. So far, we have spoken of `true' and `false' as values of
4068predicates as if they were new kinds of Emacs Lisp objects. In fact,
4069`false' is just our old friend @code{nil}. Anything else---anything
4070at all---is `true'.
4071
4072The expression that tests for truth is interpreted as @dfn{true}
4073if the result of evaluating it is a value that is not @code{nil}. In
4074other words, the result of the test is considered true if the value
4075returned is a number such as 47, a string such as @code{"hello"}, or a
4076symbol (other than @code{nil}) such as @code{flowers}, or a list (so
4077long as it is not empty), or even a buffer!
4078
4079@menu
4080* nil explained:: @code{nil} has two meanings.
4081@end menu
4082
8cda6f8f 4083@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 4084@node nil explained
8cda6f8f
GM
4085@unnumberedsubsec An explanation of @code{nil}
4086@end ifnottex
4087
4088Before illustrating a test for truth, we need an explanation of @code{nil}.
4089
4090In Emacs Lisp, the symbol @code{nil} has two meanings. First, it means the
4091empty list. Second, it means false and is the value returned when a
4092true-or-false-test tests false. @code{nil} can be written as an empty
4093list, @code{()}, or as @code{nil}. As far as the Lisp interpreter is
4094concerned, @code{()} and @code{nil} are the same. Humans, however, tend
4095to use @code{nil} for false and @code{()} for the empty list.
4096
4097In Emacs Lisp, any value that is not @code{nil}---is not the empty
4098list---is considered true. This means that if an evaluation returns
4099something that is not an empty list, an @code{if} expression will test
4100true. For example, if a number is put in the slot for the test, it
4101will be evaluated and will return itself, since that is what numbers
4102do when evaluated. In this conditional, the @code{if} expression will
4103test true. The expression tests false only when @code{nil}, an empty
4104list, is returned by evaluating the expression.
4105
4106You can see this by evaluating the two expressions in the following examples.
4107
4108In the first example, the number 4 is evaluated as the test in the
4109@code{if} expression and returns itself; consequently, the then-part
4110of the expression is evaluated and returned: @samp{true} appears in
4111the echo area. In the second example, the @code{nil} indicates false;
4112consequently, the else-part of the expression is evaluated and
4113returned: @samp{false} appears in the echo area.
4114
4115@smallexample
4116@group
4117(if 4
4118 'true
4119 'false)
4120@end group
4121
4122@group
4123(if nil
4124 'true
4125 'false)
4126@end group
4127@end smallexample
4128
4129@need 1250
4130Incidentally, if some other useful value is not available for a test that
4131returns true, then the Lisp interpreter will return the symbol @code{t}
4132for true. For example, the expression @code{(> 5 4)} returns @code{t}
4133when evaluated, as you can see by evaluating it in the usual way:
4134
4135@smallexample
4136(> 5 4)
4137@end smallexample
4138
4139@need 1250
4140@noindent
4141On the other hand, this function returns @code{nil} if the test is false.
4142
4143@smallexample
4144(> 4 5)
4145@end smallexample
4146
d6adf7e7 4147@node save-excursion
8cda6f8f
GM
4148@section @code{save-excursion}
4149@findex save-excursion
4150@cindex Region, what it is
4151@cindex Preserving point, mark, and buffer
4152@cindex Point, mark, buffer preservation
4153@findex point
4154@findex mark
4155
767b8eae 4156The @code{save-excursion} function is the third and final special form
8cda6f8f
GM
4157that we will discuss in this chapter.
4158
4159In Emacs Lisp programs used for editing, the @code{save-excursion}
4160function is very common. It saves the location of point and mark,
4161executes the body of the function, and then restores point and mark to
4162their previous positions if their locations were changed. Its primary
4163purpose is to keep the user from being surprised and disturbed by
4164unexpected movement of point or mark.
4165
4166@menu
4167* Point and mark:: A review of various locations.
4168* Template for save-excursion::
4169@end menu
4170
8cda6f8f 4171@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 4172@node Point and mark
8cda6f8f
GM
4173@unnumberedsubsec Point and Mark
4174@end ifnottex
4175
4176Before discussing @code{save-excursion}, however, it may be useful
4177first to review what point and mark are in GNU Emacs. @dfn{Point} is
4178the current location of the cursor. Wherever the cursor
4179is, that is point. More precisely, on terminals where the cursor
4180appears to be on top of a character, point is immediately before the
4181character. In Emacs Lisp, point is an integer. The first character in
4182a buffer is number one, the second is number two, and so on. The
4183function @code{point} returns the current position of the cursor as a
4184number. Each buffer has its own value for point.
4185
4186The @dfn{mark} is another position in the buffer; its value can be set
4187with a command such as @kbd{C-@key{SPC}} (@code{set-mark-command}). If
4188a mark has been set, you can use the command @kbd{C-x C-x}
4189(@code{exchange-point-and-mark}) to cause the cursor to jump to the mark
4190and set the mark to be the previous position of point. In addition, if
4191you set another mark, the position of the previous mark is saved in the
4192mark ring. Many mark positions can be saved this way. You can jump the
4193cursor to a saved mark by typing @kbd{C-u C-@key{SPC}} one or more
4194times.
4195
4196The part of the buffer between point and mark is called @dfn{the
4197region}. Numerous commands work on the region, including
4198@code{center-region}, @code{count-lines-region}, @code{kill-region}, and
4199@code{print-region}.
4200
4201The @code{save-excursion} special form saves the locations of point and
4202mark and restores those positions after the code within the body of the
4203special form is evaluated by the Lisp interpreter. Thus, if point were
4204in the beginning of a piece of text and some code moved point to the end
4205of the buffer, the @code{save-excursion} would put point back to where
4206it was before, after the expressions in the body of the function were
4207evaluated.
4208
4209In Emacs, a function frequently moves point as part of its internal
4210workings even though a user would not expect this. For example,
4211@code{count-lines-region} moves point. To prevent the user from being
4212bothered by jumps that are both unexpected and (from the user's point of
4213view) unnecessary, @code{save-excursion} is often used to keep point and
4214mark in the location expected by the user. The use of
4215@code{save-excursion} is good housekeeping.
4216
4217To make sure the house stays clean, @code{save-excursion} restores the
4218values of point and mark even if something goes wrong in the code inside
4219of it (or, to be more precise and to use the proper jargon, ``in case of
4220abnormal exit''). This feature is very helpful.
4221
4222In addition to recording the values of point and mark,
4223@code{save-excursion} keeps track of the current buffer, and restores
4224it, too. This means you can write code that will change the buffer and
4225have @code{save-excursion} switch you back to the original buffer.
4226This is how @code{save-excursion} is used in @code{append-to-buffer}.
4227(@xref{append-to-buffer, , The Definition of @code{append-to-buffer}}.)
4228
d6adf7e7 4229@node Template for save-excursion
8cda6f8f
GM
4230@subsection Template for a @code{save-excursion} Expression
4231
4232@need 800
4233The template for code using @code{save-excursion} is simple:
4234
4235@smallexample
4236@group
4237(save-excursion
4238 @var{body}@dots{})
4239@end group
4240@end smallexample
4241
4242@noindent
4243The body of the function is one or more expressions that will be
4244evaluated in sequence by the Lisp interpreter. If there is more than
4245one expression in the body, the value of the last one will be returned
4246as the value of the @code{save-excursion} function. The other
4247expressions in the body are evaluated only for their side effects; and
4248@code{save-excursion} itself is used only for its side effect (which
4249is restoring the positions of point and mark).
4250
4251@need 1250
4252In more detail, the template for a @code{save-excursion} expression
4253looks like this:
4254
4255@smallexample
4256@group
4257(save-excursion
4258 @var{first-expression-in-body}
4259 @var{second-expression-in-body}
4260 @var{third-expression-in-body}
4261 @dots{}
4262 @var{last-expression-in-body})
4263@end group
4264@end smallexample
4265
4266@noindent
4267An expression, of course, may be a symbol on its own or a list.
4268
4269In Emacs Lisp code, a @code{save-excursion} expression often occurs
4270within the body of a @code{let} expression. It looks like this:
4271
4272@smallexample
4273@group
4274(let @var{varlist}
4275 (save-excursion
4276 @var{body}@dots{}))
4277@end group
4278@end smallexample
4279
d6adf7e7 4280@node Review
8cda6f8f
GM
4281@section Review
4282
767b8eae
XF
4283In the last few chapters we have introduced a macro and a fair number
4284of functions and special forms. Here they are described in brief,
4285along with a few similar functions that have not been mentioned yet.
8cda6f8f
GM
4286
4287@table @code
4288@item eval-last-sexp
4289Evaluate the last symbolic expression before the current location of
4290point. The value is printed in the echo area unless the function is
4291invoked with an argument; in that case, the output is printed in the
4292current buffer. This command is normally bound to @kbd{C-x C-e}.
4293
4294@item defun
767b8eae
XF
4295Define function. This macro has up to five parts: the name, a
4296template for the arguments that will be passed to the function,
4297documentation, an optional interactive declaration, and the body of
4298the definition.
8cda6f8f
GM
4299
4300@need 1250
4301For example, in an early version of Emacs, the function definition was
4302as follows. (It is slightly more complex now that it seeks the first
4303non-whitespace character rather than the first visible character.)
4304
4305@smallexample
4306@group
4307(defun back-to-indentation ()
4308 "Move point to first visible character on line."
4309 (interactive)
4310 (beginning-of-line 1)
4311 (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
4312@end group
4313@end smallexample
4314
4315@ignore
4316In GNU Emacs 22,
4317
4318(defun backward-to-indentation (&optional arg)
4319 "Move backward ARG lines and position at first nonblank character."
4320 (interactive "p")
4321 (forward-line (- (or arg 1)))
4322 (skip-chars-forward " \t"))
4323
4324(defun back-to-indentation ()
4325 "Move point to the first non-whitespace character on this line."
4326 (interactive)
4327 (beginning-of-line 1)
4328 (skip-syntax-forward " " (line-end-position))
4329 ;; Move back over chars that have whitespace syntax but have the p flag.
4330 (backward-prefix-chars))
4331@end ignore
4332
4333@item interactive
4334Declare to the interpreter that the function can be used
4335interactively. This special form may be followed by a string with one
4336or more parts that pass the information to the arguments of the
4337function, in sequence. These parts may also tell the interpreter to
4338prompt for information. Parts of the string are separated by
4339newlines, @samp{\n}.
4340
4341@need 1000
4342Common code characters are:
4343
4344@table @code
4345@item b
4346The name of an existing buffer.
4347
4348@item f
4349The name of an existing file.
4350
4351@item p
4352The numeric prefix argument. (Note that this `p' is lower case.)
4353
4354@item r
4355Point and the mark, as two numeric arguments, smallest first. This
4356is the only code letter that specifies two successive arguments
4357rather than one.
4358@end table
4359
4360@xref{Interactive Codes, , Code Characters for @samp{interactive},
4361elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for a complete list of
4362code characters.
4363
4364@item let
4365Declare that a list of variables is for use within the body of the
4366@code{let} and give them an initial value, either @code{nil} or a
4367specified value; then evaluate the rest of the expressions in the body
4368of the @code{let} and return the value of the last one. Inside the
4369body of the @code{let}, the Lisp interpreter does not see the values of
4370the variables of the same names that are bound outside of the
4371@code{let}.
4372
4373@need 1250
4374For example,
4375
4376@smallexample
4377@group
4378(let ((foo (buffer-name))
4379 (bar (buffer-size)))
4380 (message
4381 "This buffer is %s and has %d characters."
4382 foo bar))
4383@end group
4384@end smallexample
4385
4386@item save-excursion
4387Record the values of point and mark and the current buffer before
4388evaluating the body of this special form. Restore the values of point
4389and mark and buffer afterward.
4390
4391@need 1250
4392For example,
4393
4394@smallexample
4395@group
4396(message "We are %d characters into this buffer."
4397 (- (point)
4398 (save-excursion
4399 (goto-char (point-min)) (point))))
4400@end group
4401@end smallexample
4402
4403@item if
4404Evaluate the first argument to the function; if it is true, evaluate
4405the second argument; else evaluate the third argument, if there is one.
4406
4407The @code{if} special form is called a @dfn{conditional}. There are
4408other conditionals in Emacs Lisp, but @code{if} is perhaps the most
4409commonly used.
4410
4411@need 1250
4412For example,
4413
4414@smallexample
4415@group
4416(if (= 22 emacs-major-version)
4417 (message "This is version 22 Emacs")
4418 (message "This is not version 22 Emacs"))
4419@end group
4420@end smallexample
4421
4422@need 1250
4423@item <
4424@itemx >
4425@itemx <=
4426@itemx >=
4427The @code{<} function tests whether its first argument is smaller than
4428its second argument. A corresponding function, @code{>}, tests whether
4429the first argument is greater than the second. Likewise, @code{<=}
4430tests whether the first argument is less than or equal to the second and
4431@code{>=} tests whether the first argument is greater than or equal to
4432the second. In all cases, both arguments must be numbers or markers
4433(markers indicate positions in buffers).
4434
4435@need 800
4436@item =
4437The @code{=} function tests whether two arguments, both numbers or
4438markers, are equal.
4439
4440@need 1250
4441@item equal
4442@itemx eq
4443Test whether two objects are the same. @code{equal} uses one meaning
4444of the word `same' and @code{eq} uses another: @code{equal} returns
4445true if the two objects have a similar structure and contents, such as
4446two copies of the same book. On the other hand, @code{eq}, returns
4447true if both arguments are actually the same object.
4448@findex equal
4449@findex eq
4450
4451@need 1250
4452@item string<
4453@itemx string-lessp
4454@itemx string=
4455@itemx string-equal
4456The @code{string-lessp} function tests whether its first argument is
4457smaller than the second argument. A shorter, alternative name for the
4458same function (a @code{defalias}) is @code{string<}.
4459
4460The arguments to @code{string-lessp} must be strings or symbols; the
4461ordering is lexicographic, so case is significant. The print names of
4462symbols are used instead of the symbols themselves.
4463
4464@cindex @samp{empty string} defined
4465An empty string, @samp{""}, a string with no characters in it, is
4466smaller than any string of characters.
4467
4468@code{string-equal} provides the corresponding test for equality. Its
4469shorter, alternative name is @code{string=}. There are no string test
4470functions that correspond to @var{>}, @code{>=}, or @code{<=}.
4471
4472@item message
4473Print a message in the echo area. The first argument is a string that
4474can contain @samp{%s}, @samp{%d}, or @samp{%c} to print the value of
4475arguments that follow the string. The argument used by @samp{%s} must
4476be a string or a symbol; the argument used by @samp{%d} must be a
4477number. The argument used by @samp{%c} must be an @sc{ascii} code
4478number; it will be printed as the character with that @sc{ascii} code.
4479(Various other %-sequences have not been mentioned.)
4480
4481@item setq
4482@itemx set
4483The @code{setq} function sets the value of its first argument to the
4484value of the second argument. The first argument is automatically
4485quoted by @code{setq}. It does the same for succeeding pairs of
4486arguments. Another function, @code{set}, takes only two arguments and
4487evaluates both of them before setting the value returned by its first
4488argument to the value returned by its second argument.
4489
4490@item buffer-name
4491Without an argument, return the name of the buffer, as a string.
4492
2fce4cd8 4493@item buffer-file-name
8cda6f8f
GM
4494Without an argument, return the name of the file the buffer is
4495visiting.
4496
4497@item current-buffer
4498Return the buffer in which Emacs is active; it may not be
4499the buffer that is visible on the screen.
4500
4501@item other-buffer
4502Return the most recently selected buffer (other than the buffer passed
4503to @code{other-buffer} as an argument and other than the current
4504buffer).
4505
4506@item switch-to-buffer
4507Select a buffer for Emacs to be active in and display it in the current
4508window so users can look at it. Usually bound to @kbd{C-x b}.
4509
4510@item set-buffer
44e97401 4511Switch Emacs's attention to a buffer on which programs will run. Don't
8cda6f8f
GM
4512alter what the window is showing.
4513
4514@item buffer-size
4515Return the number of characters in the current buffer.
4516
4517@item point
4518Return the value of the current position of the cursor, as an
4519integer counting the number of characters from the beginning of the
4520buffer.
4521
4522@item point-min
4523Return the minimum permissible value of point in
4524the current buffer. This is 1, unless narrowing is in effect.
4525
4526@item point-max
4527Return the value of the maximum permissible value of point in the
4528current buffer. This is the end of the buffer, unless narrowing is in
4529effect.
4530@end table
4531
4532@need 1500
d6adf7e7 4533@node defun Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
4534@section Exercises
4535
4536@itemize @bullet
4537@item
4538Write a non-interactive function that doubles the value of its
4539argument, a number. Make that function interactive.
4540
4541@item
4542Write a function that tests whether the current value of
4543@code{fill-column} is greater than the argument passed to the function,
4544and if so, prints an appropriate message.
4545@end itemize
4546
d6adf7e7 4547@node Buffer Walk Through
8cda6f8f
GM
4548@chapter A Few Buffer--Related Functions
4549
4550In this chapter we study in detail several of the functions used in GNU
4551Emacs. This is called a ``walk-through''. These functions are used as
4552examples of Lisp code, but are not imaginary examples; with the
4553exception of the first, simplified function definition, these functions
4554show the actual code used in GNU Emacs. You can learn a great deal from
4555these definitions. The functions described here are all related to
4556buffers. Later, we will study other functions.
4557
4558@menu
4559* Finding More:: How to find more information.
4560* simplified-beginning-of-buffer:: Shows @code{goto-char},
4561 @code{point-min}, and @code{push-mark}.
4562* mark-whole-buffer:: Almost the same as @code{beginning-of-buffer}.
4563* append-to-buffer:: Uses @code{save-excursion} and
4564 @code{insert-buffer-substring}.
4565* Buffer Related Review:: Review.
4566* Buffer Exercises::
4567@end menu
4568
d6adf7e7 4569@node Finding More
8cda6f8f
GM
4570@section Finding More Information
4571
4572@findex describe-function, @r{introduced}
4573@cindex Find function documentation
4574In this walk-through, I will describe each new function as we come to
4575it, sometimes in detail and sometimes briefly. If you are interested,
4576you can get the full documentation of any Emacs Lisp function at any
4577time by typing @kbd{C-h f} and then the name of the function (and then
4578@key{RET}). Similarly, you can get the full documentation for a
4579variable by typing @kbd{C-h v} and then the name of the variable (and
4580then @key{RET}).
4581
4582@cindex Find source of function
4583@c In version 22, tells location both of C and of Emacs Lisp
4584Also, @code{describe-function} will tell you the location of the
4585function definition.
4586
4587Put point into the name of the file that contains the function and
4588press the @key{RET} key. In this case, @key{RET} means
4589@code{push-button} rather than `return' or `enter'. Emacs will take
4590you directly to the function definition.
4591
4592@ignore
4593Not In version 22
4594
4595If you move point over the file name and press
4596the @key{RET} key, which in this case means @code{help-follow} rather
4597than `return' or `enter', Emacs will take you directly to the function
4598definition.
4599@end ignore
4600
4601More generally, if you want to see a function in its original source
88c26f5c
GM
4602file, you can use the @code{find-tag} function to jump to it.
4603@code{find-tag} works with a wide variety of languages, not just
8cda6f8f 4604Lisp, and C, and it works with non-programming text as well. For
88c26f5c 4605example, @code{find-tag} will jump to the various nodes in the
8cda6f8f 4606Texinfo source file of this document.
88c26f5c 4607The @code{find-tag} function depends on `tags tables' that record
8cda6f8f 4608the locations of the functions, variables, and other items to which
88c26f5c 4609@code{find-tag} jumps.
8cda6f8f 4610
88c26f5c 4611To use the @code{find-tag} command, type @kbd{M-.} (i.e., press the
8cda6f8f
GM
4612period key while holding down the @key{META} key, or else type the
4613@key{ESC} key and then type the period key), and then, at the prompt,
4614type in the name of the function whose source code you want to see,
4615such as @code{mark-whole-buffer}, and then type @key{RET}. Emacs will
4616switch buffers and display the source code for the function on your
4617screen. To switch back to your current buffer, type @kbd{C-x b
09e80d9f 4618@key{RET}}. (On some keyboards, the @key{META} key is labeled
8cda6f8f
GM
4619@key{ALT}.)
4620
4621@c !!! 22.1.1 tags table location in this paragraph
4622@cindex TAGS table, specifying
88c26f5c 4623@findex find-tag
8cda6f8f
GM
4624Depending on how the initial default values of your copy of Emacs are
4625set, you may also need to specify the location of your `tags table',
4626which is a file called @file{TAGS}. For example, if you are
4627interested in Emacs sources, the tags table you will most likely want,
4628if it has already been created for you, will be in a subdirectory of
4629the @file{/usr/local/share/emacs/} directory; thus you would use the
4630@code{M-x visit-tags-table} command and specify a pathname such as
4631@file{/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/TAGS}. If the tags table
4632has not already been created, you will have to create it yourself. It
0ca10bb7 4633will be in a file such as @file{/usr/local/src/emacs/src/TAGS}.
8cda6f8f
GM
4634
4635@need 1250
4636To create a @file{TAGS} file in a specific directory, switch to that
4637directory in Emacs using @kbd{M-x cd} command, or list the directory
4638with @kbd{C-x d} (@code{dired}). Then run the compile command, with
4639@w{@code{etags *.el}} as the command to execute:
4640
4641@smallexample
4642M-x compile RET etags *.el RET
4643@end smallexample
4644
4645For more information, see @ref{etags, , Create Your Own @file{TAGS} File}.
4646
4647After you become more familiar with Emacs Lisp, you will find that you will
88c26f5c 4648frequently use @code{find-tag} to navigate your way around source code;
8cda6f8f
GM
4649and you will create your own @file{TAGS} tables.
4650
4651@cindex Library, as term for `file'
4652Incidentally, the files that contain Lisp code are conventionally
4653called @dfn{libraries}. The metaphor is derived from that of a
4654specialized library, such as a law library or an engineering library,
4655rather than a general library. Each library, or file, contains
4656functions that relate to a particular topic or activity, such as
4657@file{abbrev.el} for handling abbreviations and other typing
4658shortcuts, and @file{help.el} for on-line help. (Sometimes several
4659libraries provide code for a single activity, as the various
4660@file{rmail@dots{}} files provide code for reading electronic mail.)
4661In @cite{The GNU Emacs Manual}, you will see sentences such as ``The
4662@kbd{C-h p} command lets you search the standard Emacs Lisp libraries
4663by topic keywords.''
4664
d6adf7e7 4665@node simplified-beginning-of-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
4666@section A Simplified @code{beginning-of-buffer} Definition
4667@findex simplified-beginning-of-buffer
4668
4669The @code{beginning-of-buffer} command is a good function to start with
4670since you are likely to be familiar with it and it is easy to
4671understand. Used as an interactive command, @code{beginning-of-buffer}
4672moves the cursor to the beginning of the buffer, leaving the mark at the
4673previous position. It is generally bound to @kbd{M-<}.
4674
4675In this section, we will discuss a shortened version of the function
4676that shows how it is most frequently used. This shortened function
4677works as written, but it does not contain the code for a complex option.
4678In another section, we will describe the entire function.
4679(@xref{beginning-of-buffer, , Complete Definition of
4680@code{beginning-of-buffer}}.)
4681
4682Before looking at the code, let's consider what the function
4683definition has to contain: it must include an expression that makes
4684the function interactive so it can be called by typing @kbd{M-x
4685beginning-of-buffer} or by typing a keychord such as @kbd{M-<}; it
4686must include code to leave a mark at the original position in the
4687buffer; and it must include code to move the cursor to the beginning
4688of the buffer.
4689
4690@need 1250
4691Here is the complete text of the shortened version of the function:
4692
4693@smallexample
4694@group
4695(defun simplified-beginning-of-buffer ()
4696 "Move point to the beginning of the buffer;
4697leave mark at previous position."
4698 (interactive)
4699 (push-mark)
4700 (goto-char (point-min)))
4701@end group
4702@end smallexample
4703
4704Like all function definitions, this definition has five parts following
767b8eae 4705the macro @code{defun}:
8cda6f8f
GM
4706
4707@enumerate
4708@item
4709The name: in this example, @code{simplified-beginning-of-buffer}.
4710
4711@item
4712A list of the arguments: in this example, an empty list, @code{()},
4713
4714@item
4715The documentation string.
4716
4717@item
4718The interactive expression.
4719
4720@item
4721The body.
4722@end enumerate
4723
4724@noindent
4725In this function definition, the argument list is empty; this means that
4726this function does not require any arguments. (When we look at the
4727definition for the complete function, we will see that it may be passed
4728an optional argument.)
4729
4730The interactive expression tells Emacs that the function is intended to
4731be used interactively. In this example, @code{interactive} does not have
4732an argument because @code{simplified-beginning-of-buffer} does not
4733require one.
4734
4735@need 800
4736The body of the function consists of the two lines:
4737
4738@smallexample
4739@group
4740(push-mark)
4741(goto-char (point-min))
4742@end group
4743@end smallexample
4744
4745The first of these lines is the expression, @code{(push-mark)}. When
4746this expression is evaluated by the Lisp interpreter, it sets a mark at
4747the current position of the cursor, wherever that may be. The position
4748of this mark is saved in the mark ring.
4749
4750The next line is @code{(goto-char (point-min))}. This expression
4751jumps the cursor to the minimum point in the buffer, that is, to the
4752beginning of the buffer (or to the beginning of the accessible portion
4753of the buffer if it is narrowed. @xref{Narrowing & Widening, ,
4754Narrowing and Widening}.)
4755
4756The @code{push-mark} command sets a mark at the place where the cursor
4757was located before it was moved to the beginning of the buffer by the
4758@code{(goto-char (point-min))} expression. Consequently, you can, if
4759you wish, go back to where you were originally by typing @kbd{C-x C-x}.
4760
4761That is all there is to the function definition!
4762
4763@findex describe-function
4764When you are reading code such as this and come upon an unfamiliar
4765function, such as @code{goto-char}, you can find out what it does by
4766using the @code{describe-function} command. To use this command, type
4767@kbd{C-h f} and then type in the name of the function and press
4768@key{RET}. The @code{describe-function} command will print the
4769function's documentation string in a @file{*Help*} window. For
4770example, the documentation for @code{goto-char} is:
4771
4772@smallexample
4773@group
4774Set point to POSITION, a number or marker.
4775Beginning of buffer is position (point-min), end is (point-max).
4776@end group
4777@end smallexample
4778
4779@noindent
4780The function's one argument is the desired position.
4781
4782@noindent
4783(The prompt for @code{describe-function} will offer you the symbol
4784under or preceding the cursor, so you can save typing by positioning
4785the cursor right over or after the function and then typing @kbd{C-h f
4786@key{RET}}.)
4787
4788The @code{end-of-buffer} function definition is written in the same way as
4789the @code{beginning-of-buffer} definition except that the body of the
4790function contains the expression @code{(goto-char (point-max))} in place
4791of @code{(goto-char (point-min))}.
4792
d6adf7e7 4793@node mark-whole-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
4794@section The Definition of @code{mark-whole-buffer}
4795@findex mark-whole-buffer
4796
4797The @code{mark-whole-buffer} function is no harder to understand than the
4798@code{simplified-beginning-of-buffer} function. In this case, however,
4799we will look at the complete function, not a shortened version.
4800
4801The @code{mark-whole-buffer} function is not as commonly used as the
4802@code{beginning-of-buffer} function, but is useful nonetheless: it
4803marks a whole buffer as a region by putting point at the beginning and
4804a mark at the end of the buffer. It is generally bound to @kbd{C-x
4805h}.
4806
4807@menu
4808* mark-whole-buffer overview::
4809* Body of mark-whole-buffer:: Only three lines of code.
4810@end menu
4811
8cda6f8f 4812@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 4813@node mark-whole-buffer overview
8cda6f8f
GM
4814@unnumberedsubsec An overview of @code{mark-whole-buffer}
4815@end ifnottex
4816
4817@need 1250
4818In GNU Emacs 22, the code for the complete function looks like this:
4819
4820@smallexample
4821@group
4822(defun mark-whole-buffer ()
4823 "Put point at beginning and mark at end of buffer.
4824You probably should not use this function in Lisp programs;
4825it is usually a mistake for a Lisp function to use any subroutine
4826that uses or sets the mark."
4827 (interactive)
4828 (push-mark (point))
4829 (push-mark (point-max) nil t)
4830 (goto-char (point-min)))
4831@end group
4832@end smallexample
4833
4834@need 1250
4835Like all other functions, the @code{mark-whole-buffer} function fits
4836into the template for a function definition. The template looks like
4837this:
4838
4839@smallexample
4840@group
4841(defun @var{name-of-function} (@var{argument-list})
4842 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
4843 (@var{interactive-expression}@dots{})
4844 @var{body}@dots{})
4845@end group
4846@end smallexample
4847
4848Here is how the function works: the name of the function is
4849@code{mark-whole-buffer}; it is followed by an empty argument list,
4850@samp{()}, which means that the function does not require arguments.
4851The documentation comes next.
4852
4853The next line is an @code{(interactive)} expression that tells Emacs
4854that the function will be used interactively. These details are similar
4855to the @code{simplified-beginning-of-buffer} function described in the
4856previous section.
4857
4858@need 1250
d6adf7e7 4859@node Body of mark-whole-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
4860@subsection Body of @code{mark-whole-buffer}
4861
4862The body of the @code{mark-whole-buffer} function consists of three
4863lines of code:
4864
4865@c GNU Emacs 22
4866@smallexample
4867@group
4868(push-mark (point))
4869(push-mark (point-max) nil t)
4870(goto-char (point-min))
4871@end group
4872@end smallexample
4873
4874The first of these lines is the expression, @code{(push-mark (point))}.
4875
4876This line does exactly the same job as the first line of the body of
4877the @code{simplified-beginning-of-buffer} function, which is written
4878@code{(push-mark)}. In both cases, the Lisp interpreter sets a mark
4879at the current position of the cursor.
4880
4881I don't know why the expression in @code{mark-whole-buffer} is written
4882@code{(push-mark (point))} and the expression in
4883@code{beginning-of-buffer} is written @code{(push-mark)}. Perhaps
4884whoever wrote the code did not know that the arguments for
4885@code{push-mark} are optional and that if @code{push-mark} is not
4886passed an argument, the function automatically sets mark at the
4887location of point by default. Or perhaps the expression was written
4888so as to parallel the structure of the next line. In any case, the
4889line causes Emacs to determine the position of point and set a mark
4890there.
4891
4892In earlier versions of GNU Emacs, the next line of
4893@code{mark-whole-buffer} was @code{(push-mark (point-max))}. This
4894expression sets a mark at the point in the buffer that has the highest
4895number. This will be the end of the buffer (or, if the buffer is
4896narrowed, the end of the accessible portion of the buffer.
4897@xref{Narrowing & Widening, , Narrowing and Widening}, for more about
4898narrowing.) After this mark has been set, the previous mark, the one
4899set at point, is no longer set, but Emacs remembers its position, just
4900as all other recent marks are always remembered. This means that you
4901can, if you wish, go back to that position by typing @kbd{C-u
4902C-@key{SPC}} twice.
4903
4904@need 1250
4905In GNU Emacs 22, the @code{(point-max)} is slightly more complicated.
4906The line reads
4907
4908@smallexample
4909(push-mark (point-max) nil t)
4910@end smallexample
4911
4912@noindent
4913The expression works nearly the same as before. It sets a mark at the
4914highest numbered place in the buffer that it can. However, in this
4915version, @code{push-mark} has two additional arguments. The second
4916argument to @code{push-mark} is @code{nil}. This tells the function
4917it @emph{should} display a message that says `Mark set' when it pushes
4918the mark. The third argument is @code{t}. This tells
4919@code{push-mark} to activate the mark when Transient Mark mode is
4920turned on. Transient Mark mode highlights the currently active
4921region. It is often turned off.
4922
4923Finally, the last line of the function is @code{(goto-char
4924(point-min)))}. This is written exactly the same way as it is written
4925in @code{beginning-of-buffer}. The expression moves the cursor to
4926the minimum point in the buffer, that is, to the beginning of the buffer
4927(or to the beginning of the accessible portion of the buffer). As a
4928result of this, point is placed at the beginning of the buffer and mark
4929is set at the end of the buffer. The whole buffer is, therefore, the
4930region.
4931
d6adf7e7 4932@node append-to-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
4933@section The Definition of @code{append-to-buffer}
4934@findex append-to-buffer
4935
4936The @code{append-to-buffer} command is more complex than the
4937@code{mark-whole-buffer} command. What it does is copy the region
4938(that is, the part of the buffer between point and mark) from the
4939current buffer to a specified buffer.
4940
4941@menu
4942* append-to-buffer overview::
4943* append interactive:: A two part interactive expression.
4944* append-to-buffer body:: Incorporates a @code{let} expression.
4945* append save-excursion:: How the @code{save-excursion} works.
4946@end menu
4947
8cda6f8f 4948@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 4949@node append-to-buffer overview
8cda6f8f
GM
4950@unnumberedsubsec An Overview of @code{append-to-buffer}
4951@end ifnottex
4952
4953@findex insert-buffer-substring
4954The @code{append-to-buffer} command uses the
4955@code{insert-buffer-substring} function to copy the region.
4956@code{insert-buffer-substring} is described by its name: it takes a
4957string of characters from part of a buffer, a ``substring'', and
4958inserts them into another buffer.
4959
4960Most of @code{append-to-buffer} is
4961concerned with setting up the conditions for
4962@code{insert-buffer-substring} to work: the code must specify both the
4963buffer to which the text will go, the window it comes from and goes
4964to, and the region that will be copied.
4965
4966@need 1250
4967Here is the complete text of the function:
4968
4969@smallexample
4970@group
4971(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
4972 "Append to specified buffer the text of the region.
4973It is inserted into that buffer before its point.
4974@end group
4975
4976@group
4977When calling from a program, give three arguments:
4978BUFFER (or buffer name), START and END.
4979START and END specify the portion of the current buffer to be copied."
4980 (interactive
4981 (list (read-buffer "Append to buffer: " (other-buffer
4982 (current-buffer) t))
4983 (region-beginning) (region-end)))
4984@end group
4985@group
4986 (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
4987 (save-excursion
4988 (let* ((append-to (get-buffer-create buffer))
4989 (windows (get-buffer-window-list append-to t t))
4990 point)
4991 (set-buffer append-to)
4992 (setq point (point))
4993 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
4994 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
4995 (dolist (window windows)
4996 (when (= (window-point window) point)
4997 (set-window-point window (point))))))))
4998@end group
4999@end smallexample
5000
5001The function can be understood by looking at it as a series of
5002filled-in templates.
5003
5004The outermost template is for the function definition. In this
5005function, it looks like this (with several slots filled in):
5006
5007@smallexample
5008@group
5009(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
5010 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
5011 (interactive @dots{})
5012 @var{body}@dots{})
5013@end group
5014@end smallexample
5015
5016The first line of the function includes its name and three arguments.
5017The arguments are the @code{buffer} to which the text will be copied, and
5018the @code{start} and @code{end} of the region in the current buffer that
5019will be copied.
5020
5021The next part of the function is the documentation, which is clear and
5022complete. As is conventional, the three arguments are written in
5023upper case so you will notice them easily. Even better, they are
5024described in the same order as in the argument list.
5025
5026Note that the documentation distinguishes between a buffer and its
5027name. (The function can handle either.)
5028
d6adf7e7 5029@node append interactive
8cda6f8f
GM
5030@subsection The @code{append-to-buffer} Interactive Expression
5031
5032Since the @code{append-to-buffer} function will be used interactively,
5033the function must have an @code{interactive} expression. (For a
5034review of @code{interactive}, see @ref{Interactive, , Making a
5035Function Interactive}.) The expression reads as follows:
5036
5037@smallexample
5038@group
5039(interactive
5040 (list (read-buffer
5041 "Append to buffer: "
5042 (other-buffer (current-buffer) t))
5043 (region-beginning)
5044 (region-end)))
5045@end group
5046@end smallexample
5047
5048@noindent
5049This expression is not one with letters standing for parts, as
5050described earlier. Instead, it starts a list with these parts:
5051
5052The first part of the list is an expression to read the name of a
5053buffer and return it as a string. That is @code{read-buffer}. The
5054function requires a prompt as its first argument, @samp{"Append to
5055buffer: "}. Its second argument tells the command what value to
5056provide if you don't specify anything.
5057
5058In this case that second argument is an expression containing the
5059function @code{other-buffer}, an exception, and a @samp{t}, standing
5060for true.
5061
5062The first argument to @code{other-buffer}, the exception, is yet
5063another function, @code{current-buffer}. That is not going to be
5064returned. The second argument is the symbol for true, @code{t}. that
5065tells @code{other-buffer} that it may show visible buffers (except in
5066this case, it will not show the current buffer, which makes sense).
5067
5068@need 1250
5069The expression looks like this:
5070
5071@smallexample
5072(other-buffer (current-buffer) t)
5073@end smallexample
5074
5075The second and third arguments to the @code{list} expression are
5076@code{(region-beginning)} and @code{(region-end)}. These two
5077functions specify the beginning and end of the text to be appended.
5078
5079@need 1250
5080Originally, the command used the letters @samp{B} and @samp{r}.
5081The whole @code{interactive} expression looked like this:
5082
5083@smallexample
5084(interactive "BAppend to buffer:@: \nr")
5085@end smallexample
5086
5087@noindent
5088But when that was done, the default value of the buffer switched to
5089was invisible. That was not wanted.
5090
5091(The prompt was separated from the second argument with a newline,
5092@samp{\n}. It was followed by an @samp{r} that told Emacs to bind the
5093two arguments that follow the symbol @code{buffer} in the function's
5094argument list (that is, @code{start} and @code{end}) to the values of
5095point and mark. That argument worked fine.)
5096
d6adf7e7 5097@node append-to-buffer body
8cda6f8f
GM
5098@subsection The Body of @code{append-to-buffer}
5099
5100@ignore
5101in GNU Emacs 22 in /usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/simple.el
5102
5103(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
5104 "Append to specified buffer the text of the region.
5105It is inserted into that buffer before its point.
5106
5107When calling from a program, give three arguments:
5108BUFFER (or buffer name), START and END.
5109START and END specify the portion of the current buffer to be copied."
5110 (interactive
5111 (list (read-buffer "Append to buffer: " (other-buffer (current-buffer) t))
5112 (region-beginning) (region-end)))
5113 (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
5114 (save-excursion
5115 (let* ((append-to (get-buffer-create buffer))
5116 (windows (get-buffer-window-list append-to t t))
5117 point)
5118 (set-buffer append-to)
5119 (setq point (point))
5120 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
5121 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
5122 (dolist (window windows)
5123 (when (= (window-point window) point)
5124 (set-window-point window (point))))))))
5125@end ignore
5126
5127The body of the @code{append-to-buffer} function begins with @code{let}.
5128
5129As we have seen before (@pxref{let, , @code{let}}), the purpose of a
5130@code{let} expression is to create and give initial values to one or
5131more variables that will only be used within the body of the
5132@code{let}. This means that such a variable will not be confused with
5133any variable of the same name outside the @code{let} expression.
5134
5135We can see how the @code{let} expression fits into the function as a
5136whole by showing a template for @code{append-to-buffer} with the
5137@code{let} expression in outline:
5138
5139@smallexample
5140@group
5141(defun append-to-buffer (buffer start end)
5142 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
5143 (interactive @dots{})
5144 (let ((@var{variable} @var{value}))
5145 @var{body}@dots{})
5146@end group
5147@end smallexample
5148
5149The @code{let} expression has three elements:
5150
5151@enumerate
5152@item
5153The symbol @code{let};
5154
5155@item
5156A varlist containing, in this case, a single two-element list,
5157@code{(@var{variable} @var{value})};
5158
5159@item
5160The body of the @code{let} expression.
5161@end enumerate
5162
5163@need 800
5164In the @code{append-to-buffer} function, the varlist looks like this:
5165
5166@smallexample
5167(oldbuf (current-buffer))
5168@end smallexample
5169
5170@noindent
5171In this part of the @code{let} expression, the one variable,
5172@code{oldbuf}, is bound to the value returned by the
5173@code{(current-buffer)} expression. The variable, @code{oldbuf}, is
5174used to keep track of the buffer in which you are working and from
5175which you will copy.
5176
5177The element or elements of a varlist are surrounded by a set of
5178parentheses so the Lisp interpreter can distinguish the varlist from
5179the body of the @code{let}. As a consequence, the two-element list
5180within the varlist is surrounded by a circumscribing set of parentheses.
5181The line looks like this:
5182
5183@smallexample
5184@group
5185(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
5186 @dots{} )
5187@end group
5188@end smallexample
5189
5190@noindent
5191The two parentheses before @code{oldbuf} might surprise you if you did
5192not realize that the first parenthesis before @code{oldbuf} marks the
5193boundary of the varlist and the second parenthesis marks the beginning
5194of the two-element list, @code{(oldbuf (current-buffer))}.
5195
d6adf7e7 5196@node append save-excursion
8cda6f8f
GM
5197@subsection @code{save-excursion} in @code{append-to-buffer}
5198
5199The body of the @code{let} expression in @code{append-to-buffer}
5200consists of a @code{save-excursion} expression.
5201
5202The @code{save-excursion} function saves the locations of point and
5203mark, and restores them to those positions after the expressions in the
5204body of the @code{save-excursion} complete execution. In addition,
5205@code{save-excursion} keeps track of the original buffer, and
5206restores it. This is how @code{save-excursion} is used in
5207@code{append-to-buffer}.
5208
5209@need 1500
5210@cindex Indentation for formatting
5211@cindex Formatting convention
5212Incidentally, it is worth noting here that a Lisp function is normally
5213formatted so that everything that is enclosed in a multi-line spread is
5214indented more to the right than the first symbol. In this function
5215definition, the @code{let} is indented more than the @code{defun}, and
5216the @code{save-excursion} is indented more than the @code{let}, like
5217this:
5218
5219@smallexample
5220@group
5221(defun @dots{}
5222 @dots{}
5223 @dots{}
5224 (let@dots{}
5225 (save-excursion
5226 @dots{}
5227@end group
5228@end smallexample
5229
5230@need 1500
5231@noindent
5232This formatting convention makes it easy to see that the lines in
5233the body of the @code{save-excursion} are enclosed by the parentheses
5234associated with @code{save-excursion}, just as the
5235@code{save-excursion} itself is enclosed by the parentheses associated
5236with the @code{let}:
5237
5238@smallexample
5239@group
5240(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
5241 (save-excursion
5242 @dots{}
5243 (set-buffer @dots{})
5244 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
5245 @dots{}))
5246@end group
5247@end smallexample
5248
5249@need 1200
5250The use of the @code{save-excursion} function can be viewed as a process
5251of filling in the slots of a template:
5252
5253@smallexample
5254@group
5255(save-excursion
5256 @var{first-expression-in-body}
5257 @var{second-expression-in-body}
5258 @dots{}
5259 @var{last-expression-in-body})
5260@end group
5261@end smallexample
5262
5263@need 1200
5264@noindent
5265In this function, the body of the @code{save-excursion} contains only
5266one expression, the @code{let*} expression. You know about a
5267@code{let} function. The @code{let*} function is different. It has a
5268@samp{*} in its name. It enables Emacs to set each variable in its
5269varlist in sequence, one after another.
5270
5271Its critical feature is that variables later in the varlist can make
5272use of the values to which Emacs set variables earlier in the varlist.
5273@xref{fwd-para let, , The @code{let*} expression}.
5274
5275We will skip functions like @code{let*} and focus on two: the
5276@code{set-buffer} function and the @code{insert-buffer-substring}
5277function.
5278
5279@need 1250
5280In the old days, the @code{set-buffer} expression was simply
5281
5282@smallexample
5283(set-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer))
5284@end smallexample
5285
5286@need 1250
5287@noindent
5288but now it is
5289
5290@smallexample
5291(set-buffer append-to)
5292@end smallexample
5293
5294@noindent
5295@code{append-to} is bound to @code{(get-buffer-create buffer)} earlier
5296on in the @code{let*} expression. That extra binding would not be
5297necessary except for that @code{append-to} is used later in the
5298varlist as an argument to @code{get-buffer-window-list}.
5299
5300@ignore
5301in GNU Emacs 22
5302
5303 (let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
5304 (save-excursion
5305 (let* ((append-to (get-buffer-create buffer))
5306 (windows (get-buffer-window-list append-to t t))
5307 point)
5308 (set-buffer append-to)
5309 (setq point (point))
5310 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
5311 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
5312 (dolist (window windows)
5313 (when (= (window-point window) point)
5314 (set-window-point window (point))))))))
5315@end ignore
5316
5317The @code{append-to-buffer} function definition inserts text from the
5318buffer in which you are currently to a named buffer. It happens that
5319@code{insert-buffer-substring} copies text from another buffer to the
5320current buffer, just the reverse---that is why the
5321@code{append-to-buffer} definition starts out with a @code{let} that
5322binds the local symbol @code{oldbuf} to the value returned by
5323@code{current-buffer}.
5324
5325@need 1250
5326The @code{insert-buffer-substring} expression looks like this:
5327
5328@smallexample
5329(insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)
5330@end smallexample
5331
5332@noindent
5333The @code{insert-buffer-substring} function copies a string
5334@emph{from} the buffer specified as its first argument and inserts the
5335string into the present buffer. In this case, the argument to
5336@code{insert-buffer-substring} is the value of the variable created
5337and bound by the @code{let}, namely the value of @code{oldbuf}, which
5338was the current buffer when you gave the @code{append-to-buffer}
5339command.
5340
5341After @code{insert-buffer-substring} has done its work,
5342@code{save-excursion} will restore the action to the original buffer
5343and @code{append-to-buffer} will have done its job.
5344
5345@need 800
5346Written in skeletal form, the workings of the body look like this:
5347
5348@smallexample
5349@group
5350(let (@var{bind-}@code{oldbuf}@var{-to-value-of-}@code{current-buffer})
5351 (save-excursion ; @r{Keep track of buffer.}
5352 @var{change-buffer}
5353 @var{insert-substring-from-}@code{oldbuf}@var{-into-buffer})
5354
5355 @var{change-back-to-original-buffer-when-finished}
5356@var{let-the-local-meaning-of-}@code{oldbuf}@var{-disappear-when-finished}
5357@end group
5358@end smallexample
5359
5360In summary, @code{append-to-buffer} works as follows: it saves the
5361value of the current buffer in the variable called @code{oldbuf}. It
44e97401 5362gets the new buffer (creating one if need be) and switches Emacs's
8cda6f8f
GM
5363attention to it. Using the value of @code{oldbuf}, it inserts the
5364region of text from the old buffer into the new buffer; and then using
5365@code{save-excursion}, it brings you back to your original buffer.
5366
5367In looking at @code{append-to-buffer}, you have explored a fairly
5368complex function. It shows how to use @code{let} and
5369@code{save-excursion}, and how to change to and come back from another
5370buffer. Many function definitions use @code{let},
5371@code{save-excursion}, and @code{set-buffer} this way.
5372
d6adf7e7 5373@node Buffer Related Review
8cda6f8f
GM
5374@section Review
5375
5376Here is a brief summary of the various functions discussed in this chapter.
5377
5378@table @code
5379@item describe-function
5380@itemx describe-variable
5381Print the documentation for a function or variable.
5382Conventionally bound to @kbd{C-h f} and @kbd{C-h v}.
5383
5384@item find-tag
5385Find the file containing the source for a function or variable and
5386switch buffers to it, positioning point at the beginning of the item.
5387Conventionally bound to @kbd{M-.} (that's a period following the
5388@key{META} key).
5389
5390@item save-excursion
5391Save the location of point and mark and restore their values after the
5392arguments to @code{save-excursion} have been evaluated. Also, remember
5393the current buffer and return to it.
5394
5395@item push-mark
5396Set mark at a location and record the value of the previous mark on the
5397mark ring. The mark is a location in the buffer that will keep its
5398relative position even if text is added to or removed from the buffer.
5399
5400@item goto-char
5401Set point to the location specified by the value of the argument, which
5402can be a number, a marker, or an expression that returns the number of
5403a position, such as @code{(point-min)}.
5404
5405@item insert-buffer-substring
5406Copy a region of text from a buffer that is passed to the function as
5407an argument and insert the region into the current buffer.
5408
5409@item mark-whole-buffer
5410Mark the whole buffer as a region. Normally bound to @kbd{C-x h}.
5411
5412@item set-buffer
5413Switch the attention of Emacs to another buffer, but do not change the
5414window being displayed. Used when the program rather than a human is
5415to work on a different buffer.
5416
5417@item get-buffer-create
5418@itemx get-buffer
5419Find a named buffer or create one if a buffer of that name does not
5420exist. The @code{get-buffer} function returns @code{nil} if the named
5421buffer does not exist.
5422@end table
5423
5424@need 1500
d6adf7e7 5425@node Buffer Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
5426@section Exercises
5427
5428@itemize @bullet
5429@item
5430Write your own @code{simplified-end-of-buffer} function definition;
5431then test it to see whether it works.
5432
5433@item
5434Use @code{if} and @code{get-buffer} to write a function that prints a
5435message telling you whether a buffer exists.
5436
5437@item
5438Using @code{find-tag}, find the source for the @code{copy-to-buffer}
5439function.
5440@end itemize
5441
d6adf7e7 5442@node More Complex
8cda6f8f
GM
5443@chapter A Few More Complex Functions
5444
5445In this chapter, we build on what we have learned in previous chapters
5446by looking at more complex functions. The @code{copy-to-buffer}
5447function illustrates use of two @code{save-excursion} expressions in
5448one definition, while the @code{insert-buffer} function illustrates
5449use of an asterisk in an @code{interactive} expression, use of
5450@code{or}, and the important distinction between a name and the object
5451to which the name refers.
5452
5453@menu
5454* copy-to-buffer:: With @code{set-buffer}, @code{get-buffer-create}.
5455* insert-buffer:: Read-only, and with @code{or}.
5456* beginning-of-buffer:: Shows @code{goto-char},
5457 @code{point-min}, and @code{push-mark}.
5458* Second Buffer Related Review::
5459* optional Exercise::
5460@end menu
5461
d6adf7e7 5462@node copy-to-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
5463@section The Definition of @code{copy-to-buffer}
5464@findex copy-to-buffer
5465
5466After understanding how @code{append-to-buffer} works, it is easy to
5467understand @code{copy-to-buffer}. This function copies text into a
5468buffer, but instead of adding to the second buffer, it replaces all the
5469previous text in the second buffer.
5470
5471@need 800
5472The body of @code{copy-to-buffer} looks like this,
5473
5474@smallexample
5475@group
5476@dots{}
5477(interactive "BCopy to buffer: \nr")
5478(let ((oldbuf (current-buffer)))
5479 (with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer)
5480 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
5481 (erase-buffer)
5482 (save-excursion
5483 (insert-buffer-substring oldbuf start end)))))
5484@end group
5485@end smallexample
5486
5487The @code{copy-to-buffer} function has a simpler @code{interactive}
5488expression than @code{append-to-buffer}.
5489
5490@need 800
5491The definition then says
5492
5493@smallexample
5494(with-current-buffer (get-buffer-create buffer) @dots{}
5495@end smallexample
5496
5497First, look at the earliest inner expression; that is evaluated first.
5498That expression starts with @code{get-buffer-create buffer}. The
5499function tells the computer to use the buffer with the name specified
5500as the one to which you are copying, or if such a buffer does not
5501exist, to create it. Then, the @code{with-current-buffer} function
5502evaluates its body with that buffer temporarily current.
5503
5504(This demonstrates another way to shift the computer's attention but
5505not the user's. The @code{append-to-buffer} function showed how to do
5506the same with @code{save-excursion} and @code{set-buffer}.
5507@code{with-current-buffer} is a newer, and arguably easier,
5508mechanism.)
5509
5510The @code{barf-if-buffer-read-only} function sends you an error
5511message saying the buffer is read-only if you cannot modify it.
5512
5513The next line has the @code{erase-buffer} function as its sole
5514contents. That function erases the buffer.
5515
5516Finally, the last two lines contain the @code{save-excursion}
5517expression with @code{insert-buffer-substring} as its body.
5518The @code{insert-buffer-substring} expression copies the text from
5519the buffer you are in (and you have not seen the computer shift its
5520attention, so you don't know that that buffer is now called
5521@code{oldbuf}).
5522
5523Incidentally, this is what is meant by `replacement'. To replace text,
5524Emacs erases the previous text and then inserts new text.
5525
5526@need 1250
5527In outline, the body of @code{copy-to-buffer} looks like this:
5528
5529@smallexample
5530@group
5531(let (@var{bind-}@code{oldbuf}@var{-to-value-of-}@code{current-buffer})
5532 (@var{with-the-buffer-you-are-copying-to}
5533 (@var{but-do-not-erase-or-copy-to-a-read-only-buffer})
5534 (erase-buffer)
5535 (save-excursion
5536 @var{insert-substring-from-}@code{oldbuf}@var{-into-buffer})))
5537@end group
5538@end smallexample
5539
d6adf7e7 5540@node insert-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
5541@section The Definition of @code{insert-buffer}
5542@findex insert-buffer
5543
5544@code{insert-buffer} is yet another buffer-related function. This
5545command copies another buffer @emph{into} the current buffer. It is the
5546reverse of @code{append-to-buffer} or @code{copy-to-buffer}, since they
5547copy a region of text @emph{from} the current buffer to another buffer.
5548
5549Here is a discussion based on the original code. The code was
5550simplified in 2003 and is harder to understand.
5551
5552(@xref{New insert-buffer, , New Body for @code{insert-buffer}}, to see
5553a discussion of the new body.)
5554
5555In addition, this code illustrates the use of @code{interactive} with a
5556buffer that might be @dfn{read-only} and the important distinction
5557between the name of an object and the object actually referred to.
5558
5559@menu
5560* insert-buffer code::
5561* insert-buffer interactive:: When you can read, but not write.
5562* insert-buffer body:: The body has an @code{or} and a @code{let}.
5563* if & or:: Using an @code{if} instead of an @code{or}.
5564* Insert or:: How the @code{or} expression works.
5565* Insert let:: Two @code{save-excursion} expressions.
5566* New insert-buffer::
5567@end menu
5568
8cda6f8f 5569@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 5570@node insert-buffer code
8cda6f8f
GM
5571@unnumberedsubsec The Code for @code{insert-buffer}
5572@end ifnottex
5573
5574@need 800
5575Here is the earlier code:
5576
5577@smallexample
5578@group
5579(defun insert-buffer (buffer)
5580 "Insert after point the contents of BUFFER.
5581Puts mark after the inserted text.
5582BUFFER may be a buffer or a buffer name."
5583 (interactive "*bInsert buffer:@: ")
5584@end group
5585@group
5586 (or (bufferp buffer)
5587 (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)))
5588 (let (start end newmark)
5589 (save-excursion
5590 (save-excursion
5591 (set-buffer buffer)
5592 (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))
5593@end group
5594@group
5595 (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
5596 (setq newmark (point)))
5597 (push-mark newmark)))
5598@end group
5599@end smallexample
5600
5601@need 1200
5602As with other function definitions, you can use a template to see an
5603outline of the function:
5604
5605@smallexample
5606@group
5607(defun insert-buffer (buffer)
5608 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
5609 (interactive "*bInsert buffer:@: ")
5610 @var{body}@dots{})
5611@end group
5612@end smallexample
5613
d6adf7e7 5614@node insert-buffer interactive
8cda6f8f
GM
5615@subsection The Interactive Expression in @code{insert-buffer}
5616@findex interactive, @r{example use of}
5617
5618In @code{insert-buffer}, the argument to the @code{interactive}
5619declaration has two parts, an asterisk, @samp{*}, and @samp{bInsert
5620buffer:@: }.
5621
5622@menu
5623* Read-only buffer:: When a buffer cannot be modified.
5624* b for interactive:: An existing buffer or else its name.
5625@end menu
5626
d6adf7e7 5627@node Read-only buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
5628@unnumberedsubsubsec A Read-only Buffer
5629@cindex Read-only buffer
5630@cindex Asterisk for read-only buffer
5631@findex * @r{for read-only buffer}
5632
5633The asterisk is for the situation when the current buffer is a
5634read-only buffer---a buffer that cannot be modified. If
5635@code{insert-buffer} is called when the current buffer is read-only, a
5636message to this effect is printed in the echo area and the terminal
5637may beep or blink at you; you will not be permitted to insert anything
5638into current buffer. The asterisk does not need to be followed by a
5639newline to separate it from the next argument.
5640
d6adf7e7 5641@node b for interactive
8cda6f8f
GM
5642@unnumberedsubsubsec @samp{b} in an Interactive Expression
5643
5644The next argument in the interactive expression starts with a lower
5645case @samp{b}. (This is different from the code for
5646@code{append-to-buffer}, which uses an upper-case @samp{B}.
5647@xref{append-to-buffer, , The Definition of @code{append-to-buffer}}.)
5648The lower-case @samp{b} tells the Lisp interpreter that the argument
5649for @code{insert-buffer} should be an existing buffer or else its
5650name. (The upper-case @samp{B} option provides for the possibility
5651that the buffer does not exist.) Emacs will prompt you for the name
5652of the buffer, offering you a default buffer, with name completion
5653enabled. If the buffer does not exist, you receive a message that
5654says ``No match''; your terminal may beep at you as well.
5655
5656The new and simplified code generates a list for @code{interactive}.
5657It uses the @code{barf-if-buffer-read-only} and @code{read-buffer}
5658functions with which we are already familiar and the @code{progn}
5659special form with which we are not. (It will be described later.)
5660
d6adf7e7 5661@node insert-buffer body
8cda6f8f
GM
5662@subsection The Body of the @code{insert-buffer} Function
5663
5664The body of the @code{insert-buffer} function has two major parts: an
5665@code{or} expression and a @code{let} expression. The purpose of the
5666@code{or} expression is to ensure that the argument @code{buffer} is
5667bound to a buffer and not just the name of a buffer. The body of the
5668@code{let} expression contains the code which copies the other buffer
5669into the current buffer.
5670
5671@need 1250
5672In outline, the two expressions fit into the @code{insert-buffer}
5673function like this:
5674
5675@smallexample
5676@group
5677(defun insert-buffer (buffer)
5678 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
5679 (interactive "*bInsert buffer:@: ")
5680 (or @dots{}
5681 @dots{}
5682@end group
5683@group
5684 (let (@var{varlist})
5685 @var{body-of-}@code{let}@dots{} )
5686@end group
5687@end smallexample
5688
5689To understand how the @code{or} expression ensures that the argument
5690@code{buffer} is bound to a buffer and not to the name of a buffer, it
5691is first necessary to understand the @code{or} function.
5692
5693Before doing this, let me rewrite this part of the function using
5694@code{if} so that you can see what is done in a manner that will be familiar.
5695
d6adf7e7 5696@node if & or
8cda6f8f
GM
5697@subsection @code{insert-buffer} With an @code{if} Instead of an @code{or}
5698
5699The job to be done is to make sure the value of @code{buffer} is a
5700buffer itself and not the name of a buffer. If the value is the name,
5701then the buffer itself must be got.
5702
5703You can imagine yourself at a conference where an usher is wandering
5704around holding a list with your name on it and looking for you: the
5705usher is ``bound'' to your name, not to you; but when the usher finds
5706you and takes your arm, the usher becomes ``bound'' to you.
5707
5708@need 800
5709In Lisp, you might describe this situation like this:
5710
5711@smallexample
5712@group
5713(if (not (holding-on-to-guest))
5714 (find-and-take-arm-of-guest))
5715@end group
5716@end smallexample
5717
5718We want to do the same thing with a buffer---if we do not have the
5719buffer itself, we want to get it.
5720
5721@need 1200
5722Using a predicate called @code{bufferp} that tells us whether we have a
5723buffer (rather than its name), we can write the code like this:
5724
5725@smallexample
5726@group
5727(if (not (bufferp buffer)) ; @r{if-part}
5728 (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer))) ; @r{then-part}
5729@end group
5730@end smallexample
5731
5732@noindent
5733Here, the true-or-false-test of the @code{if} expression is
5734@w{@code{(not (bufferp buffer))}}; and the then-part is the expression
5735@w{@code{(setq buffer (get-buffer buffer))}}.
5736
5737In the test, the function @code{bufferp} returns true if its argument is
5738a buffer---but false if its argument is the name of the buffer. (The
5739last character of the function name @code{bufferp} is the character
5740@samp{p}; as we saw earlier, such use of @samp{p} is a convention that
5741indicates that the function is a predicate, which is a term that means
5742that the function will determine whether some property is true or false.
5743@xref{Wrong Type of Argument, , Using the Wrong Type Object as an
5744Argument}.)
5745
5746@need 1200
5747The function @code{not} precedes the expression @code{(bufferp buffer)},
5748so the true-or-false-test looks like this:
5749
5750@smallexample
5751(not (bufferp buffer))
5752@end smallexample
5753
5754@noindent
5755@code{not} is a function that returns true if its argument is false
5756and false if its argument is true. So if @code{(bufferp buffer)}
5757returns true, the @code{not} expression returns false and vice-verse:
5758what is ``not true'' is false and what is ``not false'' is true.
5759
5760Using this test, the @code{if} expression works as follows: when the
5761value of the variable @code{buffer} is actually a buffer rather than
5762its name, the true-or-false-test returns false and the @code{if}
5763expression does not evaluate the then-part. This is fine, since we do
5764not need to do anything to the variable @code{buffer} if it really is
5765a buffer.
5766
5767On the other hand, when the value of @code{buffer} is not a buffer
5768itself, but the name of a buffer, the true-or-false-test returns true
5769and the then-part of the expression is evaluated. In this case, the
5770then-part is @code{(setq buffer (get-buffer buffer))}. This
5771expression uses the @code{get-buffer} function to return an actual
5772buffer itself, given its name. The @code{setq} then sets the variable
5773@code{buffer} to the value of the buffer itself, replacing its previous
5774value (which was the name of the buffer).
5775
d6adf7e7 5776@node Insert or
8cda6f8f
GM
5777@subsection The @code{or} in the Body
5778
5779The purpose of the @code{or} expression in the @code{insert-buffer}
5780function is to ensure that the argument @code{buffer} is bound to a
5781buffer and not just to the name of a buffer. The previous section shows
5782how the job could have been done using an @code{if} expression.
5783However, the @code{insert-buffer} function actually uses @code{or}.
5784To understand this, it is necessary to understand how @code{or} works.
5785
5786@findex or
5787An @code{or} function can have any number of arguments. It evaluates
5788each argument in turn and returns the value of the first of its
5789arguments that is not @code{nil}. Also, and this is a crucial feature
5790of @code{or}, it does not evaluate any subsequent arguments after
5791returning the first non-@code{nil} value.
5792
5793@need 800
5794The @code{or} expression looks like this:
5795
5796@smallexample
5797@group
5798(or (bufferp buffer)
5799 (setq buffer (get-buffer buffer)))
5800@end group
5801@end smallexample
5802
5803@noindent
5804The first argument to @code{or} is the expression @code{(bufferp buffer)}.
5805This expression returns true (a non-@code{nil} value) if the buffer is
5806actually a buffer, and not just the name of a buffer. In the @code{or}
5807expression, if this is the case, the @code{or} expression returns this
5808true value and does not evaluate the next expression---and this is fine
5809with us, since we do not want to do anything to the value of
5810@code{buffer} if it really is a buffer.
5811
5812On the other hand, if the value of @code{(bufferp buffer)} is @code{nil},
5813which it will be if the value of @code{buffer} is the name of a buffer,
5814the Lisp interpreter evaluates the next element of the @code{or}
5815expression. This is the expression @code{(setq buffer (get-buffer
5816buffer))}. This expression returns a non-@code{nil} value, which
5817is the value to which it sets the variable @code{buffer}---and this
5818value is a buffer itself, not the name of a buffer.
5819
5820The result of all this is that the symbol @code{buffer} is always
5821bound to a buffer itself rather than to the name of a buffer. All
5822this is necessary because the @code{set-buffer} function in a
5823following line only works with a buffer itself, not with the name to a
5824buffer.
5825
5826@need 1250
5827Incidentally, using @code{or}, the situation with the usher would be
5828written like this:
5829
5830@smallexample
5831(or (holding-on-to-guest) (find-and-take-arm-of-guest))
5832@end smallexample
5833
d6adf7e7 5834@node Insert let
8cda6f8f
GM
5835@subsection The @code{let} Expression in @code{insert-buffer}
5836
5837After ensuring that the variable @code{buffer} refers to a buffer itself
5838and not just to the name of a buffer, the @code{insert-buffer function}
5839continues with a @code{let} expression. This specifies three local
5840variables, @code{start}, @code{end}, and @code{newmark} and binds them
5841to the initial value @code{nil}. These variables are used inside the
5842remainder of the @code{let} and temporarily hide any other occurrence of
5843variables of the same name in Emacs until the end of the @code{let}.
5844
5845@need 1200
5846The body of the @code{let} contains two @code{save-excursion}
5847expressions. First, we will look at the inner @code{save-excursion}
5848expression in detail. The expression looks like this:
5849
5850@smallexample
5851@group
5852(save-excursion
5853 (set-buffer buffer)
5854 (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))
5855@end group
5856@end smallexample
5857
5858@noindent
44e97401 5859The expression @code{(set-buffer buffer)} changes Emacs's attention
8cda6f8f
GM
5860from the current buffer to the one from which the text will copied.
5861In that buffer, the variables @code{start} and @code{end} are set to
5862the beginning and end of the buffer, using the commands
5863@code{point-min} and @code{point-max}. Note that we have here an
5864illustration of how @code{setq} is able to set two variables in the
5865same expression. The first argument of @code{setq} is set to the
5866value of its second, and its third argument is set to the value of its
5867fourth.
5868
5869After the body of the inner @code{save-excursion} is evaluated, the
5870@code{save-excursion} restores the original buffer, but @code{start} and
5871@code{end} remain set to the values of the beginning and end of the
5872buffer from which the text will be copied.
5873
5874@need 1250
5875The outer @code{save-excursion} expression looks like this:
5876
5877@smallexample
5878@group
5879(save-excursion
5880 (@var{inner-}@code{save-excursion}@var{-expression}
5881 (@var{go-to-new-buffer-and-set-}@code{start}@var{-and-}@code{end})
5882 (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
5883 (setq newmark (point)))
5884@end group
5885@end smallexample
5886
5887@noindent
5888The @code{insert-buffer-substring} function copies the text
5889@emph{into} the current buffer @emph{from} the region indicated by
5890@code{start} and @code{end} in @code{buffer}. Since the whole of the
5891second buffer lies between @code{start} and @code{end}, the whole of
5892the second buffer is copied into the buffer you are editing. Next,
5893the value of point, which will be at the end of the inserted text, is
5894recorded in the variable @code{newmark}.
5895
5896After the body of the outer @code{save-excursion} is evaluated, point
5897and mark are relocated to their original places.
5898
5899However, it is convenient to locate a mark at the end of the newly
5900inserted text and locate point at its beginning. The @code{newmark}
5901variable records the end of the inserted text. In the last line of
5902the @code{let} expression, the @code{(push-mark newmark)} expression
5903function sets a mark to this location. (The previous location of the
5904mark is still accessible; it is recorded on the mark ring and you can
5905go back to it with @kbd{C-u C-@key{SPC}}.) Meanwhile, point is
5906located at the beginning of the inserted text, which is where it was
5907before you called the insert function, the position of which was saved
5908by the first @code{save-excursion}.
5909
5910@need 1250
5911The whole @code{let} expression looks like this:
5912
5913@smallexample
5914@group
5915(let (start end newmark)
5916 (save-excursion
5917 (save-excursion
5918 (set-buffer buffer)
5919 (setq start (point-min) end (point-max)))
5920 (insert-buffer-substring buffer start end)
5921 (setq newmark (point)))
5922 (push-mark newmark))
5923@end group
5924@end smallexample
5925
5926Like the @code{append-to-buffer} function, the @code{insert-buffer}
5927function uses @code{let}, @code{save-excursion}, and
5928@code{set-buffer}. In addition, the function illustrates one way to
5929use @code{or}. All these functions are building blocks that we will
5930find and use again and again.
5931
d6adf7e7 5932@node New insert-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
5933@subsection New Body for @code{insert-buffer}
5934@findex insert-buffer, new version body
5935@findex new version body for insert-buffer
5936
5937The body in the GNU Emacs 22 version is more confusing than the original.
5938
5939@need 1250
5940It consists of two expressions,
5941
5942@smallexample
5943@group
5944 (push-mark
5945 (save-excursion
5946 (insert-buffer-substring (get-buffer buffer))
5947 (point)))
5948
5949 nil
5950@end group
5951@end smallexample
5952
5953@noindent
5954except, and this is what confuses novices, very important work is done
5955inside the @code{push-mark} expression.
5956
5957The @code{get-buffer} function returns a buffer with the name
5958provided. You will note that the function is @emph{not} called
5959@code{get-buffer-create}; it does not create a buffer if one does not
5960already exist. The buffer returned by @code{get-buffer}, an existing
5961buffer, is passed to @code{insert-buffer-substring}, which inserts the
5962whole of the buffer (since you did not specify anything else).
5963
5964The location into which the buffer is inserted is recorded by
5965@code{push-mark}. Then the function returns @code{nil}, the value of
5966its last command. Put another way, the @code{insert-buffer} function
5967exists only to produce a side effect, inserting another buffer, not to
5968return any value.
5969
d6adf7e7 5970@node beginning-of-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
5971@section Complete Definition of @code{beginning-of-buffer}
5972@findex beginning-of-buffer
5973
5974The basic structure of the @code{beginning-of-buffer} function has
5975already been discussed. (@xref{simplified-beginning-of-buffer, , A
5976Simplified @code{beginning-of-buffer} Definition}.)
5977This section describes the complex part of the definition.
5978
5979As previously described, when invoked without an argument,
5980@code{beginning-of-buffer} moves the cursor to the beginning of the
5981buffer (in truth, the beginning of the accessible portion of the
5982buffer), leaving the mark at the previous position. However, when the
5983command is invoked with a number between one and ten, the function
5984considers that number to be a fraction of the length of the buffer,
5985measured in tenths, and Emacs moves the cursor that fraction of the
5986way from the beginning of the buffer. Thus, you can either call this
5987function with the key command @kbd{M-<}, which will move the cursor to
5988the beginning of the buffer, or with a key command such as @kbd{C-u 7
5989M-<} which will move the cursor to a point 70% of the way through the
5990buffer. If a number bigger than ten is used for the argument, it
5991moves to the end of the buffer.
5992
5993The @code{beginning-of-buffer} function can be called with or without an
5994argument. The use of the argument is optional.
5995
5996@menu
5997* Optional Arguments::
5998* beginning-of-buffer opt arg:: Example with optional argument.
5999* beginning-of-buffer complete::
6000@end menu
6001
d6adf7e7 6002@node Optional Arguments
8cda6f8f
GM
6003@subsection Optional Arguments
6004
6005Unless told otherwise, Lisp expects that a function with an argument in
6006its function definition will be called with a value for that argument.
6007If that does not happen, you get an error and a message that says
6008@samp{Wrong number of arguments}.
6009
6010@cindex Optional arguments
6011@cindex Keyword
6012@findex optional
6013However, optional arguments are a feature of Lisp: a particular
6014@dfn{keyword} is used to tell the Lisp interpreter that an argument is
6015optional. The keyword is @code{&optional}. (The @samp{&} in front of
6016@samp{optional} is part of the keyword.) In a function definition, if
6017an argument follows the keyword @code{&optional}, no value need be
6018passed to that argument when the function is called.
6019
6020@need 1200
6021The first line of the function definition of @code{beginning-of-buffer}
6022therefore looks like this:
6023
6024@smallexample
6025(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
6026@end smallexample
6027
6028@need 1250
6029In outline, the whole function looks like this:
6030
6031@smallexample
6032@group
6033(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
6034 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
6035 (interactive "P")
6036 (or (@var{is-the-argument-a-cons-cell} arg)
6037 (and @var{are-both-transient-mark-mode-and-mark-active-true})
6038 (push-mark))
6039 (let (@var{determine-size-and-set-it})
6040 (goto-char
6041 (@var{if-there-is-an-argument}
6042 @var{figure-out-where-to-go}
6043 @var{else-go-to}
6044 (point-min))))
6045 @var{do-nicety}
6046@end group
6047@end smallexample
6048
6049The function is similar to the @code{simplified-beginning-of-buffer}
6050function except that the @code{interactive} expression has @code{"P"}
6051as an argument and the @code{goto-char} function is followed by an
6052if-then-else expression that figures out where to put the cursor if
6053there is an argument that is not a cons cell.
6054
6055(Since I do not explain a cons cell for many more chapters, please
6056consider ignoring the function @code{consp}. @xref{List
6057Implementation, , How Lists are Implemented}, and @ref{Cons Cell Type,
6058, Cons Cell and List Types, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
6059Manual}.)
6060
6061The @code{"P"} in the @code{interactive} expression tells Emacs to
6062pass a prefix argument, if there is one, to the function in raw form.
6063A prefix argument is made by typing the @key{META} key followed by a
6064number, or by typing @kbd{C-u} and then a number. (If you don't type
6065a number, @kbd{C-u} defaults to a cons cell with a 4. A lowercase
6066@code{"p"} in the @code{interactive} expression causes the function to
6067convert a prefix arg to a number.)
6068
6069The true-or-false-test of the @code{if} expression looks complex, but
6070it is not: it checks whether @code{arg} has a value that is not
6071@code{nil} and whether it is a cons cell. (That is what @code{consp}
6072does; it checks whether its argument is a cons cell.) If @code{arg}
6073has a value that is not @code{nil} (and is not a cons cell), which
6074will be the case if @code{beginning-of-buffer} is called with a
6075numeric argument, then this true-or-false-test will return true and
6076the then-part of the @code{if} expression will be evaluated. On the
6077other hand, if @code{beginning-of-buffer} is not called with an
6078argument, the value of @code{arg} will be @code{nil} and the else-part
6079of the @code{if} expression will be evaluated. The else-part is
6080simply @code{point-min}, and when this is the outcome, the whole
6081@code{goto-char} expression is @code{(goto-char (point-min))}, which
6082is how we saw the @code{beginning-of-buffer} function in its
6083simplified form.
6084
d6adf7e7 6085@node beginning-of-buffer opt arg
8cda6f8f
GM
6086@subsection @code{beginning-of-buffer} with an Argument
6087
6088When @code{beginning-of-buffer} is called with an argument, an
6089expression is evaluated which calculates what value to pass to
6090@code{goto-char}. This expression is rather complicated at first sight.
6091It includes an inner @code{if} expression and much arithmetic. It looks
6092like this:
6093
6094@smallexample
6095@group
6096(if (> (buffer-size) 10000)
6097 ;; @r{Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!}
6098 (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
6099 (/ size 10))
6100 (/
6101 (+ 10
6102 (*
6103 size (prefix-numeric-value arg))) 10)))
6104@end group
6105@end smallexample
6106
6107@menu
6108* Disentangle beginning-of-buffer::
6109* Large buffer case::
6110* Small buffer case::
6111@end menu
6112
8cda6f8f 6113@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 6114@node Disentangle beginning-of-buffer
8cda6f8f
GM
6115@unnumberedsubsubsec Disentangle @code{beginning-of-buffer}
6116@end ifnottex
6117
6118Like other complex-looking expressions, the conditional expression
6119within @code{beginning-of-buffer} can be disentangled by looking at it
6120as parts of a template, in this case, the template for an if-then-else
6121expression. In skeletal form, the expression looks like this:
6122
6123@smallexample
6124@group
6125(if (@var{buffer-is-large}
6126 @var{divide-buffer-size-by-10-and-multiply-by-arg}
6127 @var{else-use-alternate-calculation}
6128@end group
6129@end smallexample
6130
6131The true-or-false-test of this inner @code{if} expression checks the
6132size of the buffer. The reason for this is that the old version 18
6133Emacs used numbers that are no bigger than eight million or so and in
6134the computation that followed, the programmer feared that Emacs might
6135try to use over-large numbers if the buffer were large. The term
6136`overflow', mentioned in the comment, means numbers that are over
6137large. More recent versions of Emacs use larger numbers, but this
6138code has not been touched, if only because people now look at buffers
6139that are far, far larger than ever before.
6140
6141There are two cases: if the buffer is large and if it is not.
6142
d6adf7e7 6143@node Large buffer case
8cda6f8f
GM
6144@unnumberedsubsubsec What happens in a large buffer
6145
6146In @code{beginning-of-buffer}, the inner @code{if} expression tests
6147whether the size of the buffer is greater than 10,000 characters. To do
6148this, it uses the @code{>} function and the computation of @code{size}
6149that comes from the let expression.
6150
6151In the old days, the function @code{buffer-size} was used. Not only
6152was that function called several times, it gave the size of the whole
6153buffer, not the accessible part. The computation makes much more
6154sense when it handles just the accessible part. (@xref{Narrowing &
6155Widening, , Narrowing and Widening}, for more information on focusing
6156attention to an `accessible' part.)
6157
6158@need 800
6159The line looks like this:
6160
6161@smallexample
6162(if (> size 10000)
6163@end smallexample
6164
6165@need 1200
6166@noindent
6167When the buffer is large, the then-part of the @code{if} expression is
6168evaluated. It reads like this (after formatting for easy reading):
6169
6170@smallexample
6171@group
6172(*
6173 (prefix-numeric-value arg)
6174 (/ size 10))
6175@end group
6176@end smallexample
6177
6178@noindent
6179This expression is a multiplication, with two arguments to the function
6180@code{*}.
6181
6182The first argument is @code{(prefix-numeric-value arg)}. When
6183@code{"P"} is used as the argument for @code{interactive}, the value
6184passed to the function as its argument is passed a ``raw prefix
6185argument'', and not a number. (It is a number in a list.) To perform
6186the arithmetic, a conversion is necessary, and
6187@code{prefix-numeric-value} does the job.
6188
6189@findex / @r{(division)}
6190@cindex Division
6191The second argument is @code{(/ size 10)}. This expression divides
f99f1641 6192the numeric value by ten---the numeric value of the size of the
8cda6f8f
GM
6193accessible portion of the buffer. This produces a number that tells
6194how many characters make up one tenth of the buffer size. (In Lisp,
6195@code{/} is used for division, just as @code{*} is used for
6196multiplication.)
6197
6198@need 1200
6199In the multiplication expression as a whole, this amount is multiplied
6200by the value of the prefix argument---the multiplication looks like this:
6201
6202@smallexample
6203@group
6204(* @var{numeric-value-of-prefix-arg}
6205 @var{number-of-characters-in-one-tenth-of-the-accessible-buffer})
6206@end group
6207@end smallexample
6208
6209@noindent
6210If, for example, the prefix argument is @samp{7}, the one-tenth value
6211will be multiplied by 7 to give a position 70% of the way through.
6212
6213@need 1200
6214The result of all this is that if the accessible portion of the buffer
6215is large, the @code{goto-char} expression reads like this:
6216
6217@smallexample
6218@group
6219(goto-char (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
6220 (/ size 10)))
6221@end group
6222@end smallexample
6223
6224This puts the cursor where we want it.
6225
d6adf7e7 6226@node Small buffer case
8cda6f8f
GM
6227@unnumberedsubsubsec What happens in a small buffer
6228
6229If the buffer contains fewer than 10,000 characters, a slightly
6230different computation is performed. You might think this is not
6231necessary, since the first computation could do the job. However, in
6232a small buffer, the first method may not put the cursor on exactly the
6233desired line; the second method does a better job.
6234
6235@need 800
6236The code looks like this:
6237
6238@c Keep this on one line.
6239@smallexample
6240(/ (+ 10 (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg))) 10))
6241@end smallexample
6242
6243@need 1200
6244@noindent
6245This is code in which you figure out what happens by discovering how the
6246functions are embedded in parentheses. It is easier to read if you
6247reformat it with each expression indented more deeply than its
6248enclosing expression:
6249
6250@smallexample
6251@group
6252 (/
6253 (+ 10
6254 (*
6255 size
6256 (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
6257 10))
6258@end group
6259@end smallexample
6260
6261@need 1200
6262@noindent
6263Looking at parentheses, we see that the innermost operation is
6264@code{(prefix-numeric-value arg)}, which converts the raw argument to
6265a number. In the following expression, this number is multiplied by
6266the size of the accessible portion of the buffer:
6267
6268@smallexample
6269(* size (prefix-numeric-value arg))
6270@end smallexample
6271
6272@noindent
6273This multiplication creates a number that may be larger than the size of
6274the buffer---seven times larger if the argument is 7, for example. Ten
6275is then added to this number and finally the large number is divided by
6276ten to provide a value that is one character larger than the percentage
6277position in the buffer.
6278
6279The number that results from all this is passed to @code{goto-char} and
6280the cursor is moved to that point.
6281
6282@need 1500
d6adf7e7 6283@node beginning-of-buffer complete
8cda6f8f
GM
6284@subsection The Complete @code{beginning-of-buffer}
6285
6286@need 1000
6287Here is the complete text of the @code{beginning-of-buffer} function:
6288@sp 1
6289
6290@c In GNU Emacs 22
6291@smallexample
6292@group
6293(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
6294 "Move point to the beginning of the buffer;
6295leave mark at previous position.
6296With \\[universal-argument] prefix,
6297do not set mark at previous position.
6298With numeric arg N,
6299put point N/10 of the way from the beginning.
6300
6301If the buffer is narrowed,
6302this command uses the beginning and size
6303of the accessible part of the buffer.
6304@end group
6305
6306@group
6307Don't use this command in Lisp programs!
6308\(goto-char (point-min)) is faster
6309and avoids clobbering the mark."
6310 (interactive "P")
6311 (or (consp arg)
6312 (and transient-mark-mode mark-active)
6313 (push-mark))
6314@end group
6315@group
6316 (let ((size (- (point-max) (point-min))))
6317 (goto-char (if (and arg (not (consp arg)))
6318 (+ (point-min)
6319 (if (> size 10000)
6320 ;; Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!
6321 (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
6322 (/ size 10))
a9097c6d
KB
6323 (/ (+ 10 (* size (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
6324 10)))
8cda6f8f
GM
6325 (point-min))))
6326 (if arg (forward-line 1)))
6327@end group
6328@end smallexample
6329
6330@ignore
6331From before GNU Emacs 22
6332@smallexample
6333@group
6334(defun beginning-of-buffer (&optional arg)
6335 "Move point to the beginning of the buffer;
6336leave mark at previous position.
6337With arg N, put point N/10 of the way
6338from the true beginning.
6339@end group
6340@group
6341Don't use this in Lisp programs!
6342\(goto-char (point-min)) is faster
6343and does not set the mark."
6344 (interactive "P")
6345 (push-mark)
6346@end group
6347@group
6348 (goto-char
6349 (if arg
6350 (if (> (buffer-size) 10000)
6351 ;; @r{Avoid overflow for large buffer sizes!}
6352 (* (prefix-numeric-value arg)
6353 (/ (buffer-size) 10))
6354@end group
6355@group
6356 (/ (+ 10 (* (buffer-size)
6357 (prefix-numeric-value arg)))
6358 10))
6359 (point-min)))
6360 (if arg (forward-line 1)))
6361@end group
6362@end smallexample
6363@end ignore
6364
6365@noindent
6366Except for two small points, the previous discussion shows how this
6367function works. The first point deals with a detail in the
6368documentation string, and the second point concerns the last line of
6369the function.
6370
6371@need 800
6372In the documentation string, there is reference to an expression:
6373
6374@smallexample
6375\\[universal-argument]
6376@end smallexample
6377
6378@noindent
6379A @samp{\\} is used before the first square bracket of this
6380expression. This @samp{\\} tells the Lisp interpreter to substitute
6381whatever key is currently bound to the @samp{[@dots{}]}. In the case
6382of @code{universal-argument}, that is usually @kbd{C-u}, but it might
6383be different. (@xref{Documentation Tips, , Tips for Documentation
6384Strings, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more
6385information.)
6386
6387@need 1200
6388Finally, the last line of the @code{beginning-of-buffer} command says
6389to move point to the beginning of the next line if the command is
6390invoked with an argument:
6391
6392@smallexample
6393(if arg (forward-line 1)))
6394@end smallexample
6395
6396@noindent
6397This puts the cursor at the beginning of the first line after the
6398appropriate tenths position in the buffer. This is a flourish that
6399means that the cursor is always located @emph{at least} the requested
6400tenths of the way through the buffer, which is a nicety that is,
6401perhaps, not necessary, but which, if it did not occur, would be sure
6402to draw complaints.
6403
6404On the other hand, it also means that if you specify the command with
6405a @kbd{C-u}, but without a number, that is to say, if the `raw prefix
6406argument' is simply a cons cell, then the command puts you at the
6407beginning of the second line @dots{} I don't know whether this is
6408intended or whether no one has dealt with the code to avoid this
6409happening.
6410
d6adf7e7 6411@node Second Buffer Related Review
8cda6f8f
GM
6412@section Review
6413
6414Here is a brief summary of some of the topics covered in this chapter.
6415
6416@table @code
6417@item or
6418Evaluate each argument in sequence, and return the value of the first
6419argument that is not @code{nil}; if none return a value that is not
6420@code{nil}, return @code{nil}. In brief, return the first true value
6421of the arguments; return a true value if one @emph{or} any of the
6422others are true.
6423
6424@item and
6425Evaluate each argument in sequence, and if any are @code{nil}, return
6426@code{nil}; if none are @code{nil}, return the value of the last
6427argument. In brief, return a true value only if all the arguments are
6428true; return a true value if one @emph{and} each of the others is
6429true.
6430
6431@item &optional
6432A keyword used to indicate that an argument to a function definition
6433is optional; this means that the function can be evaluated without the
6434argument, if desired.
6435
6436@item prefix-numeric-value
6437Convert the `raw prefix argument' produced by @code{(interactive
6438"P")} to a numeric value.
6439
6440@item forward-line
6441Move point forward to the beginning of the next line, or if the argument
6442is greater than one, forward that many lines. If it can't move as far
6443forward as it is supposed to, @code{forward-line} goes forward as far as
6444it can and then returns a count of the number of additional lines it was
6445supposed to move but couldn't.
6446
6447@item erase-buffer
6448Delete the entire contents of the current buffer.
6449
6450@item bufferp
6451Return @code{t} if its argument is a buffer; otherwise return @code{nil}.
6452@end table
6453
d6adf7e7 6454@node optional Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
6455@section @code{optional} Argument Exercise
6456
6457Write an interactive function with an optional argument that tests
6458whether its argument, a number, is greater than or equal to, or else,
6459less than the value of @code{fill-column}, and tells you which, in a
6460message. However, if you do not pass an argument to the function, use
646156 as a default value.
6462
d6adf7e7 6463@node Narrowing & Widening
8cda6f8f
GM
6464@chapter Narrowing and Widening
6465@cindex Focusing attention (narrowing)
6466@cindex Narrowing
6467@cindex Widening
6468
6469Narrowing is a feature of Emacs that makes it possible for you to focus
6470on a specific part of a buffer, and work without accidentally changing
6471other parts. Narrowing is normally disabled since it can confuse
6472novices.
6473
6474@menu
6475* Narrowing advantages:: The advantages of narrowing
6476* save-restriction:: The @code{save-restriction} special form.
6477* what-line:: The number of the line that point is on.
6478* narrow Exercise::
6479@end menu
6480
8cda6f8f 6481@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 6482@node Narrowing advantages
8cda6f8f
GM
6483@unnumberedsec The Advantages of Narrowing
6484@end ifnottex
6485
6486With narrowing, the rest of a buffer is made invisible, as if it weren't
6487there. This is an advantage if, for example, you want to replace a word
6488in one part of a buffer but not in another: you narrow to the part you want
6489and the replacement is carried out only in that section, not in the rest
6490of the buffer. Searches will only work within a narrowed region, not
6491outside of one, so if you are fixing a part of a document, you can keep
6492yourself from accidentally finding parts you do not need to fix by
6493narrowing just to the region you want.
6494(The key binding for @code{narrow-to-region} is @kbd{C-x n n}.)
6495
6496However, narrowing does make the rest of the buffer invisible, which
6497can scare people who inadvertently invoke narrowing and think they
6498have deleted a part of their file. Moreover, the @code{undo} command
6499(which is usually bound to @kbd{C-x u}) does not turn off narrowing
6500(nor should it), so people can become quite desperate if they do not
6501know that they can return the rest of a buffer to visibility with the
6502@code{widen} command.
6503(The key binding for @code{widen} is @kbd{C-x n w}.)
6504
6505Narrowing is just as useful to the Lisp interpreter as to a human.
6506Often, an Emacs Lisp function is designed to work on just part of a
6507buffer; or conversely, an Emacs Lisp function needs to work on all of a
6508buffer that has been narrowed. The @code{what-line} function, for
6509example, removes the narrowing from a buffer, if it has any narrowing
6510and when it has finished its job, restores the narrowing to what it was.
7001d579
GZ
6511On the other hand, the @code{count-lines} function
6512uses narrowing to restrict itself to just that portion
8cda6f8f
GM
6513of the buffer in which it is interested and then restores the previous
6514situation.
6515
d6adf7e7 6516@node save-restriction
8cda6f8f
GM
6517@section The @code{save-restriction} Special Form
6518@findex save-restriction
6519
6520In Emacs Lisp, you can use the @code{save-restriction} special form to
6521keep track of whatever narrowing is in effect, if any. When the Lisp
6522interpreter meets with @code{save-restriction}, it executes the code
6523in the body of the @code{save-restriction} expression, and then undoes
6524any changes to narrowing that the code caused. If, for example, the
6525buffer is narrowed and the code that follows @code{save-restriction}
6526gets rid of the narrowing, @code{save-restriction} returns the buffer
6527to its narrowed region afterwards. In the @code{what-line} command,
6528any narrowing the buffer may have is undone by the @code{widen}
6529command that immediately follows the @code{save-restriction} command.
6530Any original narrowing is restored just before the completion of the
6531function.
6532
6533@need 1250
6534The template for a @code{save-restriction} expression is simple:
6535
6536@smallexample
6537@group
6538(save-restriction
6539 @var{body}@dots{} )
6540@end group
6541@end smallexample
6542
6543@noindent
6544The body of the @code{save-restriction} is one or more expressions that
6545will be evaluated in sequence by the Lisp interpreter.
6546
6547Finally, a point to note: when you use both @code{save-excursion} and
6548@code{save-restriction}, one right after the other, you should use
6549@code{save-excursion} outermost. If you write them in reverse order,
6550you may fail to record narrowing in the buffer to which Emacs switches
6551after calling @code{save-excursion}. Thus, when written together,
6552@code{save-excursion} and @code{save-restriction} should be written
6553like this:
6554
6555@smallexample
6556@group
6557(save-excursion
6558 (save-restriction
6559 @var{body}@dots{}))
6560@end group
6561@end smallexample
6562
6563In other circumstances, when not written together, the
6564@code{save-excursion} and @code{save-restriction} special forms must
6565be written in the order appropriate to the function.
6566
6567@need 1250
6568For example,
6569
6570@smallexample
6571@group
6572 (save-restriction
6573 (widen)
6574 (save-excursion
6575 @var{body}@dots{}))
6576@end group
6577@end smallexample
6578
6579@ignore
6580Emacs 22
6581/usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/simple.el
6582
6583(defun what-line ()
6584 "Print the current buffer line number and narrowed line number of point."
6585 (interactive)
6586 (let ((start (point-min))
6587 (n (line-number-at-pos)))
6588 (if (= start 1)
6589 (message "Line %d" n)
6590 (save-excursion
6591 (save-restriction
6592 (widen)
6593 (message "line %d (narrowed line %d)"
6594 (+ n (line-number-at-pos start) -1) n))))))
6595
6596(defun line-number-at-pos (&optional pos)
6597 "Return (narrowed) buffer line number at position POS.
6598If POS is nil, use current buffer location.
6599Counting starts at (point-min), so the value refers
6600to the contents of the accessible portion of the buffer."
6601 (let ((opoint (or pos (point))) start)
6602 (save-excursion
6603 (goto-char (point-min))
6604 (setq start (point))
6605 (goto-char opoint)
6606 (forward-line 0)
6607 (1+ (count-lines start (point))))))
6608
6609(defun count-lines (start end)
6610 "Return number of lines between START and END.
6611This is usually the number of newlines between them,
6612but can be one more if START is not equal to END
6613and the greater of them is not at the start of a line."
6614 (save-excursion
6615 (save-restriction
6616 (narrow-to-region start end)
6617 (goto-char (point-min))
6618 (if (eq selective-display t)
6619 (save-match-data
6620 (let ((done 0))
6621 (while (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil t 40)
6622 (setq done (+ 40 done)))
6623 (while (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil t 1)
6624 (setq done (+ 1 done)))
6625 (goto-char (point-max))
6626 (if (and (/= start end)
6627 (not (bolp)))
6628 (1+ done)
6629 done)))
6630 (- (buffer-size) (forward-line (buffer-size)))))))
6631@end ignore
6632
d6adf7e7 6633@node what-line
8cda6f8f
GM
6634@section @code{what-line}
6635@findex what-line
6636@cindex Widening, example of
6637
6638The @code{what-line} command tells you the number of the line in which
6639the cursor is located. The function illustrates the use of the
6640@code{save-restriction} and @code{save-excursion} commands. Here is the
6641original text of the function:
6642
6643@smallexample
6644@group
6645(defun what-line ()
6646 "Print the current line number (in the buffer) of point."
6647 (interactive)
6648 (save-restriction
6649 (widen)
6650 (save-excursion
6651 (beginning-of-line)
6652 (message "Line %d"
6653 (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))
6654@end group
6655@end smallexample
6656
6657(In recent versions of GNU Emacs, the @code{what-line} function has
6658been expanded to tell you your line number in a narrowed buffer as
6659well as your line number in a widened buffer. The recent version is
6660more complex than the version shown here. If you feel adventurous,
6661you might want to look at it after figuring out how this version
6662works. You will probably need to use @kbd{C-h f}
6663(@code{describe-function}). The newer version uses a conditional to
6664determine whether the buffer has been narrowed.
6665
6666(Also, it uses @code{line-number-at-pos}, which among other simple
6667expressions, such as @code{(goto-char (point-min))}, moves point to
6668the beginning of the current line with @code{(forward-line 0)} rather
6669than @code{beginning-of-line}.)
6670
6671The @code{what-line} function as shown here has a documentation line
6672and is interactive, as you would expect. The next two lines use the
6673functions @code{save-restriction} and @code{widen}.
6674
6675The @code{save-restriction} special form notes whatever narrowing is in
6676effect, if any, in the current buffer and restores that narrowing after
6677the code in the body of the @code{save-restriction} has been evaluated.
6678
6679The @code{save-restriction} special form is followed by @code{widen}.
6680This function undoes any narrowing the current buffer may have had
6681when @code{what-line} was called. (The narrowing that was there is
6682the narrowing that @code{save-restriction} remembers.) This widening
6683makes it possible for the line counting commands to count from the
6684beginning of the buffer. Otherwise, they would have been limited to
6685counting within the accessible region. Any original narrowing is
6686restored just before the completion of the function by the
6687@code{save-restriction} special form.
6688
6689The call to @code{widen} is followed by @code{save-excursion}, which
6690saves the location of the cursor (i.e., of point) and of the mark, and
6691restores them after the code in the body of the @code{save-excursion}
6692uses the @code{beginning-of-line} function to move point.
6693
6694(Note that the @code{(widen)} expression comes between the
6695@code{save-restriction} and @code{save-excursion} special forms. When
6696you write the two @code{save- @dots{}} expressions in sequence, write
6697@code{save-excursion} outermost.)
6698
6699@need 1200
6700The last two lines of the @code{what-line} function are functions to
6701count the number of lines in the buffer and then print the number in the
6702echo area.
6703
6704@smallexample
6705@group
6706(message "Line %d"
6707 (1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))))))
6708@end group
6709@end smallexample
6710
6711The @code{message} function prints a one-line message at the bottom of
6712the Emacs screen. The first argument is inside of quotation marks and
6713is printed as a string of characters. However, it may contain a
6714@samp{%d} expression to print a following argument. @samp{%d} prints
6715the argument as a decimal, so the message will say something such as
6716@samp{Line 243}.
6717
6718@need 1200
6719The number that is printed in place of the @samp{%d} is computed by the
6720last line of the function:
6721
6722@smallexample
6723(1+ (count-lines 1 (point)))
6724@end smallexample
6725
6726@ignore
6727GNU Emacs 22
6728
6729(defun count-lines (start end)
6730 "Return number of lines between START and END.
6731This is usually the number of newlines between them,
6732but can be one more if START is not equal to END
6733and the greater of them is not at the start of a line."
6734 (save-excursion
6735 (save-restriction
6736 (narrow-to-region start end)
6737 (goto-char (point-min))
6738 (if (eq selective-display t)
6739 (save-match-data
6740 (let ((done 0))
6741 (while (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil t 40)
6742 (setq done (+ 40 done)))
6743 (while (re-search-forward "[\n\C-m]" nil t 1)
6744 (setq done (+ 1 done)))
6745 (goto-char (point-max))
6746 (if (and (/= start end)
6747 (not (bolp)))
6748 (1+ done)
6749 done)))
6750 (- (buffer-size) (forward-line (buffer-size)))))))
6751@end ignore
6752
6753@noindent
6754What this does is count the lines from the first position of the
6755buffer, indicated by the @code{1}, up to @code{(point)}, and then add
6756one to that number. (The @code{1+} function adds one to its
6757argument.) We add one to it because line 2 has only one line before
6758it, and @code{count-lines} counts only the lines @emph{before} the
6759current line.
6760
6761After @code{count-lines} has done its job, and the message has been
6762printed in the echo area, the @code{save-excursion} restores point and
6763mark to their original positions; and @code{save-restriction} restores
6764the original narrowing, if any.
6765
d6adf7e7 6766@node narrow Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
6767@section Exercise with Narrowing
6768
6769Write a function that will display the first 60 characters of the
6770current buffer, even if you have narrowed the buffer to its latter
6771half so that the first line is inaccessible. Restore point, mark, and
6772narrowing. For this exercise, you need to use a whole potpourri of
6773functions, including @code{save-restriction}, @code{widen},
6774@code{goto-char}, @code{point-min}, @code{message}, and
6775@code{buffer-substring}.
6776
6777@cindex Properties, mention of @code{buffer-substring-no-properties}
6778(@code{buffer-substring} is a previously unmentioned function you will
6779have to investigate yourself; or perhaps you will have to use
6780@code{buffer-substring-no-properties} or
6781@code{filter-buffer-substring} @dots{}, yet other functions. Text
6782properties are a feature otherwise not discussed here. @xref{Text
6783Properties, , Text Properties, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
6784Manual}.)
6785
6786Additionally, do you really need @code{goto-char} or @code{point-min}?
6787Or can you write the function without them?
6788
d6adf7e7 6789@node car cdr & cons
8cda6f8f
GM
6790@chapter @code{car}, @code{cdr}, @code{cons}: Fundamental Functions
6791@findex car, @r{introduced}
6792@findex cdr, @r{introduced}
6793
6794In Lisp, @code{car}, @code{cdr}, and @code{cons} are fundamental
6795functions. The @code{cons} function is used to construct lists, and
6796the @code{car} and @code{cdr} functions are used to take them apart.
6797
6798In the walk through of the @code{copy-region-as-kill} function, we
6799will see @code{cons} as well as two variants on @code{cdr},
6800namely, @code{setcdr} and @code{nthcdr}. (@xref{copy-region-as-kill}.)
6801
6802@menu
6803* Strange Names:: An historical aside: why the strange names?
6804* car & cdr:: Functions for extracting part of a list.
6805* cons:: Constructing a list.
6806* nthcdr:: Calling @code{cdr} repeatedly.
6807* nth::
6808* setcar:: Changing the first element of a list.
6809* setcdr:: Changing the rest of a list.
6810* cons Exercise::
6811@end menu
6812
8cda6f8f 6813@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 6814@node Strange Names
8cda6f8f
GM
6815@unnumberedsec Strange Names
6816@end ifnottex
6817
6818The name of the @code{cons} function is not unreasonable: it is an
6819abbreviation of the word `construct'. The origins of the names for
6820@code{car} and @code{cdr}, on the other hand, are esoteric: @code{car}
6821is an acronym from the phrase `Contents of the Address part of the
6822Register'; and @code{cdr} (pronounced `could-er') is an acronym from
6823the phrase `Contents of the Decrement part of the Register'. These
6824phrases refer to specific pieces of hardware on the very early
6825computer on which the original Lisp was developed. Besides being
6826obsolete, the phrases have been completely irrelevant for more than 25
6827years to anyone thinking about Lisp. Nonetheless, although a few
6828brave scholars have begun to use more reasonable names for these
6829functions, the old terms are still in use. In particular, since the
6830terms are used in the Emacs Lisp source code, we will use them in this
6831introduction.
6832
d6adf7e7 6833@node car & cdr
8cda6f8f
GM
6834@section @code{car} and @code{cdr}
6835
6836The @sc{car} of a list is, quite simply, the first item in the list.
6837Thus the @sc{car} of the list @code{(rose violet daisy buttercup)} is
6838@code{rose}.
6839
6840@need 1200
6841If you are reading this in Info in GNU Emacs, you can see this by
6842evaluating the following:
6843
6844@smallexample
6845(car '(rose violet daisy buttercup))
6846@end smallexample
6847
6848@noindent
6849After evaluating the expression, @code{rose} will appear in the echo
6850area.
6851
6852Clearly, a more reasonable name for the @code{car} function would be
6853@code{first} and this is often suggested.
6854
6855@code{car} does not remove the first item from the list; it only reports
6856what it is. After @code{car} has been applied to a list, the list is
6857still the same as it was. In the jargon, @code{car} is
6858`non-destructive'. This feature turns out to be important.
6859
6860The @sc{cdr} of a list is the rest of the list, that is, the
6861@code{cdr} function returns the part of the list that follows the
6862first item. Thus, while the @sc{car} of the list @code{'(rose violet
6863daisy buttercup)} is @code{rose}, the rest of the list, the value
6864returned by the @code{cdr} function, is @code{(violet daisy
6865buttercup)}.
6866
6867@need 800
6868You can see this by evaluating the following in the usual way:
6869
6870@smallexample
6871(cdr '(rose violet daisy buttercup))
6872@end smallexample
6873
6874@noindent
6875When you evaluate this, @code{(violet daisy buttercup)} will appear in
6876the echo area.
6877
6878Like @code{car}, @code{cdr} does not remove any elements from the
6879list---it just returns a report of what the second and subsequent
6880elements are.
6881
6882Incidentally, in the example, the list of flowers is quoted. If it were
6883not, the Lisp interpreter would try to evaluate the list by calling
6884@code{rose} as a function. In this example, we do not want to do that.
6885
6886Clearly, a more reasonable name for @code{cdr} would be @code{rest}.
6887
6888(There is a lesson here: when you name new functions, consider very
6889carefully what you are doing, since you may be stuck with the names
6890for far longer than you expect. The reason this document perpetuates
6891these names is that the Emacs Lisp source code uses them, and if I did
6892not use them, you would have a hard time reading the code; but do,
6893please, try to avoid using these terms yourself. The people who come
6894after you will be grateful to you.)
6895
6896When @code{car} and @code{cdr} are applied to a list made up of symbols,
6897such as the list @code{(pine fir oak maple)}, the element of the list
6898returned by the function @code{car} is the symbol @code{pine} without
6899any parentheses around it. @code{pine} is the first element in the
6900list. However, the @sc{cdr} of the list is a list itself, @code{(fir
6901oak maple)}, as you can see by evaluating the following expressions in
6902the usual way:
6903
6904@smallexample
6905@group
6906(car '(pine fir oak maple))
6907
6908(cdr '(pine fir oak maple))
6909@end group
6910@end smallexample
6911
6912On the other hand, in a list of lists, the first element is itself a
6913list. @code{car} returns this first element as a list. For example,
6914the following list contains three sub-lists, a list of carnivores, a
6915list of herbivores and a list of sea mammals:
6916
6917@smallexample
6918@group
6919(car '((lion tiger cheetah)
6920 (gazelle antelope zebra)
6921 (whale dolphin seal)))
6922@end group
6923@end smallexample
6924
6925@noindent
6926In this example, the first element or @sc{car} of the list is the list of
6927carnivores, @code{(lion tiger cheetah)}, and the rest of the list is
6928@code{((gazelle antelope zebra) (whale dolphin seal))}.
6929
6930@smallexample
6931@group
6932(cdr '((lion tiger cheetah)
6933 (gazelle antelope zebra)
6934 (whale dolphin seal)))
6935@end group
6936@end smallexample
6937
6938It is worth saying again that @code{car} and @code{cdr} are
6939non-destructive---that is, they do not modify or change lists to which
6940they are applied. This is very important for how they are used.
6941
6942Also, in the first chapter, in the discussion about atoms, I said that
6943in Lisp, ``certain kinds of atom, such as an array, can be separated
6944into parts; but the mechanism for doing this is different from the
6945mechanism for splitting a list. As far as Lisp is concerned, the
6946atoms of a list are unsplittable.'' (@xref{Lisp Atoms}.) The
6947@code{car} and @code{cdr} functions are used for splitting lists and
6948are considered fundamental to Lisp. Since they cannot split or gain
6949access to the parts of an array, an array is considered an atom.
6950Conversely, the other fundamental function, @code{cons}, can put
6951together or construct a list, but not an array. (Arrays are handled
6952by array-specific functions. @xref{Arrays, , Arrays, elisp, The GNU
6953Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.)
6954
d6adf7e7 6955@node cons
8cda6f8f
GM
6956@section @code{cons}
6957@findex cons, @r{introduced}
6958
6959The @code{cons} function constructs lists; it is the inverse of
6960@code{car} and @code{cdr}. For example, @code{cons} can be used to make
6961a four element list from the three element list, @code{(fir oak maple)}:
6962
6963@smallexample
6964(cons 'pine '(fir oak maple))
6965@end smallexample
6966
6967@need 800
6968@noindent
6969After evaluating this list, you will see
6970
6971@smallexample
6972(pine fir oak maple)
6973@end smallexample
6974
6975@noindent
6976appear in the echo area. @code{cons} causes the creation of a new
6977list in which the element is followed by the elements of the original
6978list.
6979
6980We often say that `@code{cons} puts a new element at the beginning of
6981a list; it attaches or pushes elements onto the list', but this
6982phrasing can be misleading, since @code{cons} does not change an
6983existing list, but creates a new one.
6984
6985Like @code{car} and @code{cdr}, @code{cons} is non-destructive.
6986
6987@menu
6988* Build a list::
6989* length:: How to find the length of a list.
6990@end menu
6991
8cda6f8f 6992@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 6993@node Build a list
8cda6f8f
GM
6994@unnumberedsubsec Build a list
6995@end ifnottex
6996
6997@code{cons} must have a list to attach to.@footnote{Actually, you can
6998@code{cons} an element to an atom to produce a dotted pair. Dotted
6999pairs are not discussed here; see @ref{Dotted Pair Notation, , Dotted
7000Pair Notation, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.} You
7001cannot start from absolutely nothing. If you are building a list, you
7002need to provide at least an empty list at the beginning. Here is a
7003series of @code{cons} expressions that build up a list of flowers. If
7004you are reading this in Info in GNU Emacs, you can evaluate each of
7005the expressions in the usual way; the value is printed in this text
7006after @samp{@result{}}, which you may read as `evaluates to'.
7007
7008@smallexample
7009@group
7010(cons 'buttercup ())
7011 @result{} (buttercup)
7012@end group
7013
7014@group
7015(cons 'daisy '(buttercup))
7016 @result{} (daisy buttercup)
7017@end group
7018
7019@group
7020(cons 'violet '(daisy buttercup))
7021 @result{} (violet daisy buttercup)
7022@end group
7023
7024@group
7025(cons 'rose '(violet daisy buttercup))
7026 @result{} (rose violet daisy buttercup)
7027@end group
7028@end smallexample
7029
7030@noindent
7031In the first example, the empty list is shown as @code{()} and a list
7032made up of @code{buttercup} followed by the empty list is constructed.
7033As you can see, the empty list is not shown in the list that was
7034constructed. All that you see is @code{(buttercup)}. The empty list is
7035not counted as an element of a list because there is nothing in an empty
7036list. Generally speaking, an empty list is invisible.
7037
7038The second example, @code{(cons 'daisy '(buttercup))} constructs a new,
7039two element list by putting @code{daisy} in front of @code{buttercup};
7040and the third example constructs a three element list by putting
7041@code{violet} in front of @code{daisy} and @code{buttercup}.
7042
d6adf7e7 7043@node length
8cda6f8f
GM
7044@subsection Find the Length of a List: @code{length}
7045@findex length
7046
7047You can find out how many elements there are in a list by using the Lisp
7048function @code{length}, as in the following examples:
7049
7050@smallexample
7051@group
7052(length '(buttercup))
7053 @result{} 1
7054@end group
7055
7056@group
7057(length '(daisy buttercup))
7058 @result{} 2
7059@end group
7060
7061@group
7062(length (cons 'violet '(daisy buttercup)))
7063 @result{} 3
7064@end group
7065@end smallexample
7066
7067@noindent
7068In the third example, the @code{cons} function is used to construct a
7069three element list which is then passed to the @code{length} function as
7070its argument.
7071
7072@need 1200
7073We can also use @code{length} to count the number of elements in an
7074empty list:
7075
7076@smallexample
7077@group
7078(length ())
7079 @result{} 0
7080@end group
7081@end smallexample
7082
7083@noindent
7084As you would expect, the number of elements in an empty list is zero.
7085
7086An interesting experiment is to find out what happens if you try to find
7087the length of no list at all; that is, if you try to call @code{length}
7088without giving it an argument, not even an empty list:
7089
7090@smallexample
7091(length )
7092@end smallexample
7093
7094@need 800
7095@noindent
7096What you see, if you evaluate this, is the error message
7097
7098@smallexample
7099Lisp error: (wrong-number-of-arguments length 0)
7100@end smallexample
7101
7102@noindent
7103This means that the function receives the wrong number of
7104arguments, zero, when it expects some other number of arguments. In
7105this case, one argument is expected, the argument being a list whose
7106length the function is measuring. (Note that @emph{one} list is
7107@emph{one} argument, even if the list has many elements inside it.)
7108
7109The part of the error message that says @samp{length} is the name of
7110the function.
7111
7112@ignore
7113@code{length} is still a subroutine, but you need C-h f to discover that.
7114
7115In an earlier version:
7116 This is written with a special notation, @samp{#<subr},
7117 that indicates that the function @code{length} is one of the primitive
7118 functions written in C rather than in Emacs Lisp. (@samp{subr} is an
7119 abbreviation for `subroutine'.) @xref{What Is a Function, , What Is a
7120 Function?, elisp , The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more
7121 about subroutines.
7122@end ignore
7123
d6adf7e7 7124@node nthcdr
8cda6f8f
GM
7125@section @code{nthcdr}
7126@findex nthcdr
7127
7128The @code{nthcdr} function is associated with the @code{cdr} function.
7129What it does is take the @sc{cdr} of a list repeatedly.
7130
7131If you take the @sc{cdr} of the list @code{(pine fir
7132oak maple)}, you will be returned the list @code{(fir oak maple)}. If you
7133repeat this on what was returned, you will be returned the list
7134@code{(oak maple)}. (Of course, repeated @sc{cdr}ing on the original
7135list will just give you the original @sc{cdr} since the function does
7136not change the list. You need to evaluate the @sc{cdr} of the
7137@sc{cdr} and so on.) If you continue this, eventually you will be
7138returned an empty list, which in this case, instead of being shown as
7139@code{()} is shown as @code{nil}.
7140
7141@need 1200
7142For review, here is a series of repeated @sc{cdr}s, the text following
7143the @samp{@result{}} shows what is returned.
7144
7145@smallexample
7146@group
7147(cdr '(pine fir oak maple))
7148 @result{}(fir oak maple)
7149@end group
7150
7151@group
7152(cdr '(fir oak maple))
7153 @result{} (oak maple)
7154@end group
7155
7156@group
7157(cdr '(oak maple))
7158 @result{}(maple)
7159@end group
7160
7161@group
7162(cdr '(maple))
7163 @result{} nil
7164@end group
7165
7166@group
7167(cdr 'nil)
7168 @result{} nil
7169@end group
7170
7171@group
7172(cdr ())
7173 @result{} nil
7174@end group
7175@end smallexample
7176
7177@need 1200
7178You can also do several @sc{cdr}s without printing the values in
7179between, like this:
7180
7181@smallexample
7182@group
7183(cdr (cdr '(pine fir oak maple)))
7184 @result{} (oak maple)
7185@end group
7186@end smallexample
7187
7188@noindent
7189In this example, the Lisp interpreter evaluates the innermost list first.
7190The innermost list is quoted, so it just passes the list as it is to the
7191innermost @code{cdr}. This @code{cdr} passes a list made up of the
7192second and subsequent elements of the list to the outermost @code{cdr},
7193which produces a list composed of the third and subsequent elements of
7194the original list. In this example, the @code{cdr} function is repeated
7195and returns a list that consists of the original list without its
7196first two elements.
7197
7198The @code{nthcdr} function does the same as repeating the call to
7199@code{cdr}. In the following example, the argument 2 is passed to the
7200function @code{nthcdr}, along with the list, and the value returned is
7201the list without its first two items, which is exactly the same
7202as repeating @code{cdr} twice on the list:
7203
7204@smallexample
7205@group
7206(nthcdr 2 '(pine fir oak maple))
7207 @result{} (oak maple)
7208@end group
7209@end smallexample
7210
7211@need 1200
7212Using the original four element list, we can see what happens when
7213various numeric arguments are passed to @code{nthcdr}, including 0, 1,
7214and 5:
7215
7216@smallexample
7217@group
7218;; @r{Leave the list as it was.}
7219(nthcdr 0 '(pine fir oak maple))
7220 @result{} (pine fir oak maple)
7221@end group
7222
7223@group
7224;; @r{Return a copy without the first element.}
7225(nthcdr 1 '(pine fir oak maple))
7226 @result{} (fir oak maple)
7227@end group
7228
7229@group
7230;; @r{Return a copy of the list without three elements.}
7231(nthcdr 3 '(pine fir oak maple))
7232 @result{} (maple)
7233@end group
7234
7235@group
7236;; @r{Return a copy lacking all four elements.}
7237(nthcdr 4 '(pine fir oak maple))
7238 @result{} nil
7239@end group
7240
7241@group
7242;; @r{Return a copy lacking all elements.}
7243(nthcdr 5 '(pine fir oak maple))
7244 @result{} nil
7245@end group
7246@end smallexample
7247
d6adf7e7 7248@node nth
8cda6f8f
GM
7249@section @code{nth}
7250@findex nth
7251
7252The @code{nthcdr} function takes the @sc{cdr} of a list repeatedly.
7253The @code{nth} function takes the @sc{car} of the result returned by
7254@code{nthcdr}. It returns the Nth element of the list.
7255
7256@need 1500
7257Thus, if it were not defined in C for speed, the definition of
7258@code{nth} would be:
7259
7260@smallexample
7261@group
7262(defun nth (n list)
7263 "Returns the Nth element of LIST.
7264N counts from zero. If LIST is not that long, nil is returned."
7265 (car (nthcdr n list)))
7266@end group
7267@end smallexample
7268
7269@noindent
7270(Originally, @code{nth} was defined in Emacs Lisp in @file{subr.el},
7271but its definition was redone in C in the 1980s.)
7272
7273The @code{nth} function returns a single element of a list.
7274This can be very convenient.
7275
7276Note that the elements are numbered from zero, not one. That is to
7277say, the first element of a list, its @sc{car} is the zeroth element.
7278This is called `zero-based' counting and often bothers people who
7279are accustomed to the first element in a list being number one, which
7280is `one-based'.
7281
7282@need 1250
7283For example:
7284
7285@smallexample
7286@group
7287(nth 0 '("one" "two" "three"))
7288 @result{} "one"
7289
7290(nth 1 '("one" "two" "three"))
7291 @result{} "two"
7292@end group
7293@end smallexample
7294
7295It is worth mentioning that @code{nth}, like @code{nthcdr} and
7296@code{cdr}, does not change the original list---the function is
7297non-destructive. This is in sharp contrast to the @code{setcar} and
7298@code{setcdr} functions.
7299
d6adf7e7 7300@node setcar
8cda6f8f
GM
7301@section @code{setcar}
7302@findex setcar
7303
7304As you might guess from their names, the @code{setcar} and @code{setcdr}
7305functions set the @sc{car} or the @sc{cdr} of a list to a new value.
7306They actually change the original list, unlike @code{car} and @code{cdr}
7307which leave the original list as it was. One way to find out how this
7308works is to experiment. We will start with the @code{setcar} function.
7309
7310@need 1200
7311First, we can make a list and then set the value of a variable to the
7312list, using the @code{setq} function. Here is a list of animals:
7313
7314@smallexample
7315(setq animals '(antelope giraffe lion tiger))
7316@end smallexample
7317
7318@noindent
7319If you are reading this in Info inside of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate
7320this expression in the usual fashion, by positioning the cursor after
7321the expression and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}. (I'm doing this right here
7322as I write this. This is one of the advantages of having the
7323interpreter built into the computing environment. Incidentally, when
7324there is nothing on the line after the final parentheses, such as a
7325comment, point can be on the next line. Thus, if your cursor is in
7326the first column of the next line, you do not need to move it.
7327Indeed, Emacs permits any amount of white space after the final
7328parenthesis.)
7329
7330@need 1200
7331When we evaluate the variable @code{animals}, we see that it is bound to
7332the list @code{(antelope giraffe lion tiger)}:
7333
7334@smallexample
7335@group
7336animals
7337 @result{} (antelope giraffe lion tiger)
7338@end group
7339@end smallexample
7340
7341@noindent
7342Put another way, the variable @code{animals} points to the list
7343@code{(antelope giraffe lion tiger)}.
7344
7345Next, evaluate the function @code{setcar} while passing it two
7346arguments, the variable @code{animals} and the quoted symbol
7347@code{hippopotamus}; this is done by writing the three element list
7348@code{(setcar animals 'hippopotamus)} and then evaluating it in the
7349usual fashion:
7350
7351@smallexample
7352(setcar animals 'hippopotamus)
7353@end smallexample
7354
7355@need 1200
7356@noindent
7357After evaluating this expression, evaluate the variable @code{animals}
7358again. You will see that the list of animals has changed:
7359
7360@smallexample
7361@group
7362animals
7363 @result{} (hippopotamus giraffe lion tiger)
7364@end group
7365@end smallexample
7366
7367@noindent
7368The first element on the list, @code{antelope} is replaced by
7369@code{hippopotamus}.
7370
7371So we can see that @code{setcar} did not add a new element to the list
7372as @code{cons} would have; it replaced @code{antelope} with
7373@code{hippopotamus}; it @emph{changed} the list.
7374
d6adf7e7 7375@node setcdr
8cda6f8f
GM
7376@section @code{setcdr}
7377@findex setcdr
7378
7379The @code{setcdr} function is similar to the @code{setcar} function,
7380except that the function replaces the second and subsequent elements of
7381a list rather than the first element.
7382
7383(To see how to change the last element of a list, look ahead to
7384@ref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new} function}, which uses
7385the @code{nthcdr} and @code{setcdr} functions.)
7386
7387@need 1200
7388To see how this works, set the value of the variable to a list of
7389domesticated animals by evaluating the following expression:
7390
7391@smallexample
7392(setq domesticated-animals '(horse cow sheep goat))
7393@end smallexample
7394
7395@need 1200
7396@noindent
7397If you now evaluate the list, you will be returned the list
7398@code{(horse cow sheep goat)}:
7399
7400@smallexample
7401@group
7402domesticated-animals
7403 @result{} (horse cow sheep goat)
7404@end group
7405@end smallexample
7406
7407@need 1200
7408Next, evaluate @code{setcdr} with two arguments, the name of the
7409variable which has a list as its value, and the list to which the
7410@sc{cdr} of the first list will be set;
7411
7412@smallexample
7413(setcdr domesticated-animals '(cat dog))
7414@end smallexample
7415
7416@noindent
7417If you evaluate this expression, the list @code{(cat dog)} will appear
7418in the echo area. This is the value returned by the function. The
7419result we are interested in is the ``side effect'', which we can see by
7420evaluating the variable @code{domesticated-animals}:
7421
7422@smallexample
7423@group
7424domesticated-animals
7425 @result{} (horse cat dog)
7426@end group
7427@end smallexample
7428
7429@noindent
7430Indeed, the list is changed from @code{(horse cow sheep goat)} to
7431@code{(horse cat dog)}. The @sc{cdr} of the list is changed from
7432@code{(cow sheep goat)} to @code{(cat dog)}.
7433
d6adf7e7 7434@node cons Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
7435@section Exercise
7436
7437Construct a list of four birds by evaluating several expressions with
7438@code{cons}. Find out what happens when you @code{cons} a list onto
7439itself. Replace the first element of the list of four birds with a
7440fish. Replace the rest of that list with a list of other fish.
7441
d6adf7e7 7442@node Cutting & Storing Text
8cda6f8f
GM
7443@chapter Cutting and Storing Text
7444@cindex Cutting and storing text
7445@cindex Storing and cutting text
7446@cindex Killing text
7447@cindex Clipping text
7448@cindex Erasing text
7449@cindex Deleting text
7450
7451Whenever you cut or clip text out of a buffer with a `kill' command in
7452GNU Emacs, it is stored in a list and you can bring it back with a
7453`yank' command.
7454
7455(The use of the word `kill' in Emacs for processes which specifically
7456@emph{do not} destroy the values of the entities is an unfortunate
7457historical accident. A much more appropriate word would be `clip' since
7458that is what the kill commands do; they clip text out of a buffer and
7459put it into storage from which it can be brought back. I have often
7460been tempted to replace globally all occurrences of `kill' in the Emacs
7461sources with `clip' and all occurrences of `killed' with `clipped'.)
7462
7463@menu
7464* Storing Text:: Text is stored in a list.
7465* zap-to-char:: Cutting out text up to a character.
7466* kill-region:: Cutting text out of a region.
7467* copy-region-as-kill:: A definition for copying text.
7468* Digression into C:: Minor note on C programming language macros.
7469* defvar:: How to give a variable an initial value.
7470* cons & search-fwd Review::
7471* search Exercises::
7472@end menu
7473
8cda6f8f 7474@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 7475@node Storing Text
8cda6f8f
GM
7476@unnumberedsec Storing Text in a List
7477@end ifnottex
7478
7479When text is cut out of a buffer, it is stored on a list. Successive
7480pieces of text are stored on the list successively, so the list might
7481look like this:
7482
7483@smallexample
7484("a piece of text" "previous piece")
7485@end smallexample
7486
7487@need 1200
7488@noindent
7489The function @code{cons} can be used to create a new list from a piece
7490of text (an `atom', to use the jargon) and an existing list, like
7491this:
7492
7493@smallexample
7494@group
7495(cons "another piece"
7496 '("a piece of text" "previous piece"))
7497@end group
7498@end smallexample
7499
7500@need 1200
7501@noindent
7502If you evaluate this expression, a list of three elements will appear in
7503the echo area:
7504
7505@smallexample
7506("another piece" "a piece of text" "previous piece")
7507@end smallexample
7508
7509With the @code{car} and @code{nthcdr} functions, you can retrieve
7510whichever piece of text you want. For example, in the following code,
7511@code{nthcdr 1 @dots{}} returns the list with the first item removed;
7512and the @code{car} returns the first element of that remainder---the
7513second element of the original list:
7514
7515@smallexample
7516@group
7517(car (nthcdr 1 '("another piece"
7518 "a piece of text"
7519 "previous piece")))
7520 @result{} "a piece of text"
7521@end group
7522@end smallexample
7523
7524The actual functions in Emacs are more complex than this, of course.
7525The code for cutting and retrieving text has to be written so that
7526Emacs can figure out which element in the list you want---the first,
7527second, third, or whatever. In addition, when you get to the end of
7528the list, Emacs should give you the first element of the list, rather
7529than nothing at all.
7530
7531The list that holds the pieces of text is called the @dfn{kill ring}.
7532This chapter leads up to a description of the kill ring and how it is
7533used by first tracing how the @code{zap-to-char} function works. This
7534function uses (or `calls') a function that invokes a function that
7535manipulates the kill ring. Thus, before reaching the mountains, we
7536climb the foothills.
7537
7538A subsequent chapter describes how text that is cut from the buffer is
7539retrieved. @xref{Yanking, , Yanking Text Back}.
7540
d6adf7e7 7541@node zap-to-char
8cda6f8f
GM
7542@section @code{zap-to-char}
7543@findex zap-to-char
7544
8f4ea8e0 7545@c FIXME remove obsolete stuff
8cda6f8f
GM
7546The @code{zap-to-char} function changed little between GNU Emacs
7547version 19 and GNU Emacs version 22. However, @code{zap-to-char}
7548calls another function, @code{kill-region}, which enjoyed a major
7549rewrite.
7550
7551The @code{kill-region} function in Emacs 19 is complex, but does not
7552use code that is important at this time. We will skip it.
7553
7554The @code{kill-region} function in Emacs 22 is easier to read than the
7555same function in Emacs 19 and introduces a very important concept,
7556that of error handling. We will walk through the function.
7557
7558But first, let us look at the interactive @code{zap-to-char} function.
7559
7560@menu
7561* Complete zap-to-char:: The complete implementation.
7562* zap-to-char interactive:: A three part interactive expression.
7563* zap-to-char body:: A short overview.
7564* search-forward:: How to search for a string.
7565* progn:: The @code{progn} special form.
7566* Summing up zap-to-char:: Using @code{point} and @code{search-forward}.
7567@end menu
7568
8cda6f8f 7569@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 7570@node Complete zap-to-char
8cda6f8f
GM
7571@unnumberedsubsec The Complete @code{zap-to-char} Implementation
7572@end ifnottex
7573
7574The @code{zap-to-char} function removes the text in the region between
7575the location of the cursor (i.e., of point) up to and including the
7576next occurrence of a specified character. The text that
7577@code{zap-to-char} removes is put in the kill ring; and it can be
7578retrieved from the kill ring by typing @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank}). If
7579the command is given an argument, it removes text through that number
7580of occurrences. Thus, if the cursor were at the beginning of this
7581sentence and the character were @samp{s}, @samp{Thus} would be
7582removed. If the argument were two, @samp{Thus, if the curs} would be
7583removed, up to and including the @samp{s} in @samp{cursor}.
7584
7585If the specified character is not found, @code{zap-to-char} will say
7586``Search failed'', tell you the character you typed, and not remove
7587any text.
7588
7589In order to determine how much text to remove, @code{zap-to-char} uses
7590a search function. Searches are used extensively in code that
7591manipulates text, and we will focus attention on them as well as on the
7592deletion command.
7593
7594@ignore
7595@c GNU Emacs version 19
7596(defun zap-to-char (arg char) ; version 19 implementation
7597 "Kill up to and including ARG'th occurrence of CHAR.
7598Goes backward if ARG is negative; error if CHAR not found."
7599 (interactive "*p\ncZap to char: ")
7600 (kill-region (point)
7601 (progn
7602 (search-forward
7603 (char-to-string char) nil nil arg)
7604 (point))))
7605@end ignore
7606
7607@need 1250
7608Here is the complete text of the version 22 implementation of the function:
7609
7610@c GNU Emacs 22
7611@smallexample
7612@group
7613(defun zap-to-char (arg char)
7614 "Kill up to and including ARG'th occurrence of CHAR.
7615Case is ignored if `case-fold-search' is non-nil in the current buffer.
7616Goes backward if ARG is negative; error if CHAR not found."
7617 (interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
7618 (if (char-table-p translation-table-for-input)
7619 (setq char (or (aref translation-table-for-input char) char)))
7620 (kill-region (point) (progn
a9097c6d
KB
7621 (search-forward (char-to-string char)
7622 nil nil arg)
8cda6f8f
GM
7623 (point))))
7624@end group
7625@end smallexample
7626
7627The documentation is thorough. You do need to know the jargon meaning
7628of the word `kill'.
7629
d6adf7e7 7630@node zap-to-char interactive
8cda6f8f
GM
7631@subsection The @code{interactive} Expression
7632
7633@need 800
7634The interactive expression in the @code{zap-to-char} command looks like
7635this:
7636
7637@smallexample
7638(interactive "p\ncZap to char: ")
7639@end smallexample
7640
7641The part within quotation marks, @code{"p\ncZap to char:@: "}, specifies
7642two different things. First, and most simply, is the @samp{p}.
7643This part is separated from the next part by a newline, @samp{\n}.
7644The @samp{p} means that the first argument to the function will be
7645passed the value of a `processed prefix'. The prefix argument is
7646passed by typing @kbd{C-u} and a number, or @kbd{M-} and a number. If
7647the function is called interactively without a prefix, 1 is passed to
7648this argument.
7649
7650The second part of @code{"p\ncZap to char:@: "} is
7651@samp{cZap to char:@: }. In this part, the lower case @samp{c}
7652indicates that @code{interactive} expects a prompt and that the
7653argument will be a character. The prompt follows the @samp{c} and is
7654the string @samp{Zap to char:@: } (with a space after the colon to
7655make it look good).
7656
7657What all this does is prepare the arguments to @code{zap-to-char} so they
7658are of the right type, and give the user a prompt.
7659
7660In a read-only buffer, the @code{zap-to-char} function copies the text
7661to the kill ring, but does not remove it. The echo area displays a
7662message saying that the buffer is read-only. Also, the terminal may
7663beep or blink at you.
7664
d6adf7e7 7665@node zap-to-char body
8cda6f8f
GM
7666@subsection The Body of @code{zap-to-char}
7667
7668The body of the @code{zap-to-char} function contains the code that
7669kills (that is, removes) the text in the region from the current
7670position of the cursor up to and including the specified character.
7671
7672The first part of the code looks like this:
7673
7674@smallexample
7675(if (char-table-p translation-table-for-input)
7676 (setq char (or (aref translation-table-for-input char) char)))
7677(kill-region (point) (progn
7678 (search-forward (char-to-string char) nil nil arg)
7679 (point)))
7680@end smallexample
7681
7682@noindent
7683@code{char-table-p} is an hitherto unseen function. It determines
7684whether its argument is a character table. When it is, it sets the
7685character passed to @code{zap-to-char} to one of them, if that
7686character exists, or to the character itself. (This becomes important
7687for certain characters in non-European languages. The @code{aref}
7688function extracts an element from an array. It is an array-specific
7689function that is not described in this document. @xref{Arrays, ,
7690Arrays, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.)
7691
7692@noindent
7693@code{(point)} is the current position of the cursor.
7694
7695The next part of the code is an expression using @code{progn}. The body
7696of the @code{progn} consists of calls to @code{search-forward} and
7697@code{point}.
7698
7699It is easier to understand how @code{progn} works after learning about
7700@code{search-forward}, so we will look at @code{search-forward} and
7701then at @code{progn}.
7702
d6adf7e7 7703@node search-forward
8cda6f8f
GM
7704@subsection The @code{search-forward} Function
7705@findex search-forward
7706
7707The @code{search-forward} function is used to locate the
7708zapped-for-character in @code{zap-to-char}. If the search is
7709successful, @code{search-forward} leaves point immediately after the
7710last character in the target string. (In @code{zap-to-char}, the
7711target string is just one character long. @code{zap-to-char} uses the
7712function @code{char-to-string} to ensure that the computer treats that
7713character as a string.) If the search is backwards,
7714@code{search-forward} leaves point just before the first character in
7715the target. Also, @code{search-forward} returns @code{t} for true.
7716(Moving point is therefore a `side effect'.)
7717
7718@need 1250
7719In @code{zap-to-char}, the @code{search-forward} function looks like this:
7720
7721@smallexample
7722(search-forward (char-to-string char) nil nil arg)
7723@end smallexample
7724
7725The @code{search-forward} function takes four arguments:
7726
7727@enumerate
7728@item
7729The first argument is the target, what is searched for. This must be a
7730string, such as @samp{"z"}.
7731
7732As it happens, the argument passed to @code{zap-to-char} is a single
7733character. Because of the way computers are built, the Lisp
7734interpreter may treat a single character as being different from a
7735string of characters. Inside the computer, a single character has a
7736different electronic format than a string of one character. (A single
7737character can often be recorded in the computer using exactly one
7738byte; but a string may be longer, and the computer needs to be ready
7739for this.) Since the @code{search-forward} function searches for a
7740string, the character that the @code{zap-to-char} function receives as
7741its argument must be converted inside the computer from one format to
7742the other; otherwise the @code{search-forward} function will fail.
7743The @code{char-to-string} function is used to make this conversion.
7744
7745@item
7746The second argument bounds the search; it is specified as a position in
7747the buffer. In this case, the search can go to the end of the buffer,
7748so no bound is set and the second argument is @code{nil}.
7749
7750@item
7751The third argument tells the function what it should do if the search
7752fails---it can signal an error (and print a message) or it can return
7753@code{nil}. A @code{nil} as the third argument causes the function to
7754signal an error when the search fails.
7755
7756@item
7757The fourth argument to @code{search-forward} is the repeat count---how
7758many occurrences of the string to look for. This argument is optional
7759and if the function is called without a repeat count, this argument is
7760passed the value 1. If this argument is negative, the search goes
7761backwards.
7762@end enumerate
7763
7764@need 800
7765In template form, a @code{search-forward} expression looks like this:
7766
7767@smallexample
7768@group
7769(search-forward "@var{target-string}"
7770 @var{limit-of-search}
7771 @var{what-to-do-if-search-fails}
7772 @var{repeat-count})
7773@end group
7774@end smallexample
7775
7776We will look at @code{progn} next.
7777
d6adf7e7 7778@node progn
8cda6f8f
GM
7779@subsection The @code{progn} Special Form
7780@findex progn
7781
7782@code{progn} is a special form that causes each of its arguments to be
7783evaluated in sequence and then returns the value of the last one. The
7784preceding expressions are evaluated only for the side effects they
7785perform. The values produced by them are discarded.
7786
7787@need 800
7788The template for a @code{progn} expression is very simple:
7789
7790@smallexample
7791@group
7792(progn
7793 @var{body}@dots{})
7794@end group
7795@end smallexample
7796
7797In @code{zap-to-char}, the @code{progn} expression has to do two things:
7798put point in exactly the right position; and return the location of
7799point so that @code{kill-region} will know how far to kill to.
7800
7801The first argument to the @code{progn} is @code{search-forward}. When
7802@code{search-forward} finds the string, the function leaves point
7803immediately after the last character in the target string. (In this
7804case the target string is just one character long.) If the search is
7805backwards, @code{search-forward} leaves point just before the first
7806character in the target. The movement of point is a side effect.
7807
7808The second and last argument to @code{progn} is the expression
7809@code{(point)}. This expression returns the value of point, which in
7810this case will be the location to which it has been moved by
7811@code{search-forward}. (In the source, a line that tells the function
7812to go to the previous character, if it is going forward, was commented
7813out in 1999; I don't remember whether that feature or mis-feature was
7814ever a part of the distributed source.) The value of @code{point} is
7815returned by the @code{progn} expression and is passed to
7816@code{kill-region} as @code{kill-region}'s second argument.
7817
d6adf7e7 7818@node Summing up zap-to-char
8cda6f8f
GM
7819@subsection Summing up @code{zap-to-char}
7820
7821Now that we have seen how @code{search-forward} and @code{progn} work,
7822we can see how the @code{zap-to-char} function works as a whole.
7823
7824The first argument to @code{kill-region} is the position of the cursor
7825when the @code{zap-to-char} command is given---the value of point at
7826that time. Within the @code{progn}, the search function then moves
7827point to just after the zapped-to-character and @code{point} returns the
7828value of this location. The @code{kill-region} function puts together
7829these two values of point, the first one as the beginning of the region
7830and the second one as the end of the region, and removes the region.
7831
7832The @code{progn} special form is necessary because the
7833@code{kill-region} command takes two arguments; and it would fail if
7834@code{search-forward} and @code{point} expressions were written in
7835sequence as two additional arguments. The @code{progn} expression is
7836a single argument to @code{kill-region} and returns the one value that
7837@code{kill-region} needs for its second argument.
7838
d6adf7e7 7839@node kill-region
8cda6f8f
GM
7840@section @code{kill-region}
7841@findex kill-region
7842
7843The @code{zap-to-char} function uses the @code{kill-region} function.
7844This function clips text from a region and copies that text to
7845the kill ring, from which it may be retrieved.
7846
7847@ignore
7848GNU Emacs 22:
7849
7850(defun kill-region (beg end &optional yank-handler)
7851 "Kill (\"cut\") text between point and mark.
7852This deletes the text from the buffer and saves it in the kill ring.
7853The command \\[yank] can retrieve it from there.
7854\(If you want to kill and then yank immediately, use \\[kill-ring-save].)
7855
7856If you want to append the killed region to the last killed text,
7857use \\[append-next-kill] before \\[kill-region].
7858
7859If the buffer is read-only, Emacs will beep and refrain from deleting
7860the text, but put the text in the kill ring anyway. This means that
7861you can use the killing commands to copy text from a read-only buffer.
7862
7863This is the primitive for programs to kill text (as opposed to deleting it).
7864Supply two arguments, character positions indicating the stretch of text
7865 to be killed.
7866Any command that calls this function is a \"kill command\".
7867If the previous command was also a kill command,
7868the text killed this time appends to the text killed last time
7869to make one entry in the kill ring.
7870
7871In Lisp code, optional third arg YANK-HANDLER, if non-nil,
7872specifies the yank-handler text property to be set on the killed
7873text. See `insert-for-yank'."
7874 ;; Pass point first, then mark, because the order matters
7875 ;; when calling kill-append.
7876 (interactive (list (point) (mark)))
7877 (unless (and beg end)
7878 (error "The mark is not set now, so there is no region"))
7879 (condition-case nil
7880 (let ((string (filter-buffer-substring beg end t)))
7881 (when string ;STRING is nil if BEG = END
7882 ;; Add that string to the kill ring, one way or another.
7883 (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
7884 (kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)
7885 (kill-new string nil yank-handler)))
7886 (when (or string (eq last-command 'kill-region))
7887 (setq this-command 'kill-region))
7888 nil)
7889 ((buffer-read-only text-read-only)
7890 ;; The code above failed because the buffer, or some of the characters
7891 ;; in the region, are read-only.
7892 ;; We should beep, in case the user just isn't aware of this.
7893 ;; However, there's no harm in putting
7894 ;; the region's text in the kill ring, anyway.
7895 (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
7896 ;; Set this-command now, so it will be set even if we get an error.
7897 (setq this-command 'kill-region)
7898 ;; This should barf, if appropriate, and give us the correct error.
7899 (if kill-read-only-ok
7900 (progn (message "Read only text copied to kill ring") nil)
7901 ;; Signal an error if the buffer is read-only.
7902 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
7903 ;; If the buffer isn't read-only, the text is.
7904 (signal 'text-read-only (list (current-buffer)))))))
7905@end ignore
7906
7907The Emacs 22 version of that function uses @code{condition-case} and
7908@code{copy-region-as-kill}, both of which we will explain.
7909@code{condition-case} is an important special form.
7910
7911In essence, the @code{kill-region} function calls
7912@code{condition-case}, which takes three arguments. In this function,
7913the first argument does nothing. The second argument contains the
7914code that does the work when all goes well. The third argument
7915contains the code that is called in the event of an error.
7916
7917@menu
7918* Complete kill-region:: The function definition.
7919* condition-case:: Dealing with a problem.
7920* Lisp macro::
7921@end menu
7922
8cda6f8f 7923@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 7924@node Complete kill-region
8cda6f8f
GM
7925@unnumberedsubsec The Complete @code{kill-region} Definition
7926@end ifnottex
7927
7928@need 1200
7929We will go through the @code{condition-case} code in a moment. First,
7930let us look at the definition of @code{kill-region}, with comments
7931added:
7932
7933@c GNU Emacs 22:
7934@smallexample
7935@group
7936(defun kill-region (beg end)
7937 "Kill (\"cut\") text between point and mark.
7938This deletes the text from the buffer and saves it in the kill ring.
7939The command \\[yank] can retrieve it from there. @dots{} "
7940@end group
7941
7942@group
7943 ;; @bullet{} Since order matters, pass point first.
7944 (interactive (list (point) (mark)))
7945 ;; @bullet{} And tell us if we cannot cut the text.
7946 ;; `unless' is an `if' without a then-part.
7947 (unless (and beg end)
7948 (error "The mark is not set now, so there is no region"))
7949@end group
7950
7951@group
7952 ;; @bullet{} `condition-case' takes three arguments.
7953 ;; If the first argument is nil, as it is here,
7954 ;; information about the error signal is not
7955 ;; stored for use by another function.
7956 (condition-case nil
7957@end group
7958
7959@group
7960 ;; @bullet{} The second argument to `condition-case' tells the
7961 ;; Lisp interpreter what to do when all goes well.
7962@end group
7963
7964@group
7965 ;; It starts with a `let' function that extracts the string
7966 ;; and tests whether it exists. If so (that is what the
7967 ;; `when' checks), it calls an `if' function that determines
7968 ;; whether the previous command was another call to
7969 ;; `kill-region'; if it was, then the new text is appended to
7970 ;; the previous text; if not, then a different function,
7971 ;; `kill-new', is called.
7972@end group
7973
7974@group
7975 ;; The `kill-append' function concatenates the new string and
7976 ;; the old. The `kill-new' function inserts text into a new
7977 ;; item in the kill ring.
7978@end group
7979
7980@group
7981 ;; `when' is an `if' without an else-part. The second `when'
7982 ;; again checks whether the current string exists; in
7983 ;; addition, it checks whether the previous command was
7984 ;; another call to `kill-region'. If one or the other
7985 ;; condition is true, then it sets the current command to
7986 ;; be `kill-region'.
7987@end group
7988@group
7989 (let ((string (filter-buffer-substring beg end t)))
7990 (when string ;STRING is nil if BEG = END
7991 ;; Add that string to the kill ring, one way or another.
7992 (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
7993@end group
7994@group
7995 ;; @minus{} `yank-handler' is an optional argument to
7996 ;; `kill-region' that tells the `kill-append' and
7997 ;; `kill-new' functions how deal with properties
7998 ;; added to the text, such as `bold' or `italics'.
7999 (kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)
8000 (kill-new string nil yank-handler)))
8001 (when (or string (eq last-command 'kill-region))
8002 (setq this-command 'kill-region))
8003 nil)
8004@end group
8005
8006@group
8007 ;; @bullet{} The third argument to `condition-case' tells the interpreter
8008 ;; what to do with an error.
8009@end group
8010@group
8011 ;; The third argument has a conditions part and a body part.
8012 ;; If the conditions are met (in this case,
8013 ;; if text or buffer are read-only)
8014 ;; then the body is executed.
8015@end group
8016@group
8017 ;; The first part of the third argument is the following:
8018 ((buffer-read-only text-read-only) ;; the if-part
8019 ;; @dots{} the then-part
8020 (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
8021@end group
8022@group
8023 ;; Next, also as part of the then-part, set this-command, so
8024 ;; it will be set in an error
8025 (setq this-command 'kill-region)
8026 ;; Finally, in the then-part, send a message if you may copy
8350f087 8027 ;; the text to the kill ring without signaling an error, but
8cda6f8f
GM
8028 ;; don't if you may not.
8029@end group
8030@group
8031 (if kill-read-only-ok
8032 (progn (message "Read only text copied to kill ring") nil)
8033 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
8034 ;; If the buffer isn't read-only, the text is.
8035 (signal 'text-read-only (list (current-buffer)))))
8036@end group
8037@end smallexample
8038
8039@ignore
8040@c v 21
8041@smallexample
8042@group
8043(defun kill-region (beg end)
8044 "Kill between point and mark.
8045The text is deleted but saved in the kill ring."
8046 (interactive "r")
8047@end group
8048
8049@group
8050 ;; 1. `condition-case' takes three arguments.
8051 ;; If the first argument is nil, as it is here,
8052 ;; information about the error signal is not
8053 ;; stored for use by another function.
8054 (condition-case nil
8055@end group
8056
8057@group
8058 ;; 2. The second argument to `condition-case'
8059 ;; tells the Lisp interpreter what to do when all goes well.
8060@end group
8061
8062@group
8063 ;; The `delete-and-extract-region' function usually does the
8064 ;; work. If the beginning and ending of the region are both
8065 ;; the same, then the variable `string' will be empty, or nil
8066 (let ((string (delete-and-extract-region beg end)))
8067@end group
8068
8069@group
8070 ;; `when' is an `if' clause that cannot take an `else-part'.
8071 ;; Emacs normally sets the value of `last-command' to the
8072 ;; previous command.
8073@end group
8074@group
8075 ;; `kill-append' concatenates the new string and the old.
8076 ;; `kill-new' inserts text into a new item in the kill ring.
8077 (when string
8078 (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
8079 ;; if true, prepend string
8080 (kill-append string (< end beg))
8081 (kill-new string)))
8082 (setq this-command 'kill-region))
8083@end group
8084
8085@group
8086 ;; 3. The third argument to `condition-case' tells the interpreter
8087 ;; what to do with an error.
8088@end group
8089@group
8090 ;; The third argument has a conditions part and a body part.
8091 ;; If the conditions are met (in this case,
8092 ;; if text or buffer are read-only)
8093 ;; then the body is executed.
8094@end group
8095@group
8096 ((buffer-read-only text-read-only) ;; this is the if-part
8097 ;; then...
8098 (copy-region-as-kill beg end)
8099@end group
8100@group
8101 (if kill-read-only-ok ;; usually this variable is nil
8102 (message "Read only text copied to kill ring")
8103 ;; or else, signal an error if the buffer is read-only;
8104 (barf-if-buffer-read-only)
8105 ;; and, in any case, signal that the text is read-only.
8106 (signal 'text-read-only (list (current-buffer)))))))
8107@end group
8108@end smallexample
8109@end ignore
8110
d6adf7e7 8111@node condition-case
8cda6f8f
GM
8112@subsection @code{condition-case}
8113@findex condition-case
8114
8115As we have seen earlier (@pxref{Making Errors, , Generate an Error
8116Message}), when the Emacs Lisp interpreter has trouble evaluating an
8117expression, it provides you with help; in the jargon, this is called
8118``signaling an error''. Usually, the computer stops the program and
8119shows you a message.
8120
8121However, some programs undertake complicated actions. They should not
8122simply stop on an error. In the @code{kill-region} function, the most
8123likely error is that you will try to kill text that is read-only and
8124cannot be removed. So the @code{kill-region} function contains code
8125to handle this circumstance. This code, which makes up the body of
8126the @code{kill-region} function, is inside of a @code{condition-case}
8127special form.
8128
8129@need 800
8130The template for @code{condition-case} looks like this:
8131
8132@smallexample
8133@group
8134(condition-case
8135 @var{var}
8136 @var{bodyform}
8137 @var{error-handler}@dots{})
8138@end group
8139@end smallexample
8140
8141The second argument, @var{bodyform}, is straightforward. The
8142@code{condition-case} special form causes the Lisp interpreter to
8143evaluate the code in @var{bodyform}. If no error occurs, the special
8144form returns the code's value and produces the side-effects, if any.
8145
8146In short, the @var{bodyform} part of a @code{condition-case}
8147expression determines what should happen when everything works
8148correctly.
8149
8150However, if an error occurs, among its other actions, the function
8151generating the error signal will define one or more error condition
8152names.
8153
8154An error handler is the third argument to @code{condition case}.
8155An error handler has two parts, a @var{condition-name} and a
8156@var{body}. If the @var{condition-name} part of an error handler
8157matches a condition name generated by an error, then the @var{body}
8158part of the error handler is run.
8159
8160As you will expect, the @var{condition-name} part of an error handler
8161may be either a single condition name or a list of condition names.
8162
8163Also, a complete @code{condition-case} expression may contain more
8164than one error handler. When an error occurs, the first applicable
8165handler is run.
8166
8167Lastly, the first argument to the @code{condition-case} expression,
8168the @var{var} argument, is sometimes bound to a variable that
8169contains information about the error. However, if that argument is
8170nil, as is the case in @code{kill-region}, that information is
8171discarded.
8172
8173@need 1200
8174In brief, in the @code{kill-region} function, the code
8175@code{condition-case} works like this:
8176
8177@smallexample
8178@group
8179@var{If no errors}, @var{run only this code}
8180 @var{but}, @var{if errors}, @var{run this other code}.
8181@end group
8182@end smallexample
8183
8184@ignore
81852006 Oct 24
8186In Emacs 22,
8187copy-region-as-kill is short, 12 lines, and uses
8188filter-buffer-substring, which is longer, 39 lines
8189and has delete-and-extract-region in it.
8190delete-and-extract-region is written in C.
8191
8192see Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar}
8193this is line 8054
8194Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar} includes line 8350
8195@end ignore
8196
d6adf7e7 8197@node Lisp macro
8cda6f8f
GM
8198@subsection Lisp macro
8199@cindex Macro, lisp
8200@cindex Lisp macro
8201
8202The part of the @code{condition-case} expression that is evaluated in
8203the expectation that all goes well has a @code{when}. The code uses
8204@code{when} to determine whether the @code{string} variable points to
8205text that exists.
8206
8207A @code{when} expression is simply a programmers' convenience. It is
8208an @code{if} without the possibility of an else clause. In your mind,
8209you can replace @code{when} with @code{if} and understand what goes
8210on. That is what the Lisp interpreter does.
8211
09b98a01 8212Technically speaking, @code{when} is a Lisp macro. A Lisp macro
8cda6f8f
GM
8213enables you to define new control constructs and other language
8214features. It tells the interpreter how to compute another Lisp
8215expression which will in turn compute the value. In this case, the
8216`other expression' is an @code{if} expression.
8217
8218The @code{kill-region} function definition also has an @code{unless}
8219macro; it is the converse of @code{when}. The @code{unless} macro is
8220an @code{if} without a then clause
8221
8222For more about Lisp macros, see @ref{Macros, , Macros, elisp, The GNU
8223Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}. The C programming language also
8224provides macros. These are different, but also useful.
8225
8226@ignore
8227We will briefly look at C macros in
8228@ref{Digression into C}.
8229@end ignore
8230
8231@need 1200
8232Regarding the @code{when} macro, in the @code{condition-case}
8233expression, when the string has content, then another conditional
8234expression is executed. This is an @code{if} with both a then-part
8235and an else-part.
8236
8237@smallexample
8238@group
8239(if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
8240 (kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)
8241 (kill-new string nil yank-handler))
8242@end group
8243@end smallexample
8244
8245The then-part is evaluated if the previous command was another call to
8246@code{kill-region}; if not, the else-part is evaluated.
8247
8248@code{yank-handler} is an optional argument to @code{kill-region} that
8249tells the @code{kill-append} and @code{kill-new} functions how deal
8250with properties added to the text, such as `bold' or `italics'.
8251
8252@code{last-command} is a variable that comes with Emacs that we have
8253not seen before. Normally, whenever a function is executed, Emacs
8254sets the value of @code{last-command} to the previous command.
8255
8256@need 1200
8257In this segment of the definition, the @code{if} expression checks
8258whether the previous command was @code{kill-region}. If it was,
8259
8260@smallexample
8261(kill-append string (< end beg) yank-handler)
8262@end smallexample
8263
8264@noindent
8265concatenates a copy of the newly clipped text to the just previously
8266clipped text in the kill ring.
8267
d6adf7e7 8268@node copy-region-as-kill
8cda6f8f
GM
8269@section @code{copy-region-as-kill}
8270@findex copy-region-as-kill
8271@findex nthcdr
8272
8273The @code{copy-region-as-kill} function copies a region of text from a
8274buffer and (via either @code{kill-append} or @code{kill-new}) saves it
8275in the @code{kill-ring}.
8276
8277If you call @code{copy-region-as-kill} immediately after a
8278@code{kill-region} command, Emacs appends the newly copied text to the
8279previously copied text. This means that if you yank back the text, you
8280get it all, from both this and the previous operation. On the other
8281hand, if some other command precedes the @code{copy-region-as-kill},
8282the function copies the text into a separate entry in the kill ring.
8283
8284@menu
8285* Complete copy-region-as-kill:: The complete function definition.
8286* copy-region-as-kill body:: The body of @code{copy-region-as-kill}.
8287@end menu
8288
8cda6f8f 8289@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 8290@node Complete copy-region-as-kill
8cda6f8f
GM
8291@unnumberedsubsec The complete @code{copy-region-as-kill} function definition
8292@end ifnottex
8293
8294@need 1200
8295Here is the complete text of the version 22 @code{copy-region-as-kill}
8296function:
8297
8298@smallexample
8299@group
8300(defun copy-region-as-kill (beg end)
8301 "Save the region as if killed, but don't kill it.
8302In Transient Mark mode, deactivate the mark.
8303If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, also save the text for a window
8304system cut and paste."
8305 (interactive "r")
8306@end group
8307@group
8308 (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
8309 (kill-append (filter-buffer-substring beg end) (< end beg))
8310 (kill-new (filter-buffer-substring beg end)))
8311@end group
8312@group
8313 (if transient-mark-mode
8314 (setq deactivate-mark t))
8315 nil)
8316@end group
8317@end smallexample
8318
8319@need 800
8320As usual, this function can be divided into its component parts:
8321
8322@smallexample
8323@group
8324(defun copy-region-as-kill (@var{argument-list})
8325 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
8326 (interactive "r")
8327 @var{body}@dots{})
8328@end group
8329@end smallexample
8330
8331The arguments are @code{beg} and @code{end} and the function is
8332interactive with @code{"r"}, so the two arguments must refer to the
8333beginning and end of the region. If you have been reading though this
8334document from the beginning, understanding these parts of a function is
8335almost becoming routine.
8336
8337The documentation is somewhat confusing unless you remember that the
8338word `kill' has a meaning different from usual. The `Transient Mark'
8339and @code{interprogram-cut-function} comments explain certain
8340side-effects.
8341
8342After you once set a mark, a buffer always contains a region. If you
8343wish, you can use Transient Mark mode to highlight the region
8344temporarily. (No one wants to highlight the region all the time, so
8345Transient Mark mode highlights it only at appropriate times. Many
8346people turn off Transient Mark mode, so the region is never
8347highlighted.)
8348
8349Also, a windowing system allows you to copy, cut, and paste among
8350different programs. In the X windowing system, for example, the
8351@code{interprogram-cut-function} function is @code{x-select-text},
8352which works with the windowing system's equivalent of the Emacs kill
8353ring.
8354
8355The body of the @code{copy-region-as-kill} function starts with an
8356@code{if} clause. What this clause does is distinguish between two
8357different situations: whether or not this command is executed
8358immediately after a previous @code{kill-region} command. In the first
8359case, the new region is appended to the previously copied text.
8360Otherwise, it is inserted into the beginning of the kill ring as a
8361separate piece of text from the previous piece.
8362
8363The last two lines of the function prevent the region from lighting up
8364if Transient Mark mode is turned on.
8365
8366The body of @code{copy-region-as-kill} merits discussion in detail.
8367
d6adf7e7 8368@node copy-region-as-kill body
8cda6f8f
GM
8369@subsection The Body of @code{copy-region-as-kill}
8370
8371The @code{copy-region-as-kill} function works in much the same way as
8372the @code{kill-region} function. Both are written so that two or more
8373kills in a row combine their text into a single entry. If you yank
8374back the text from the kill ring, you get it all in one piece.
8375Moreover, kills that kill forward from the current position of the
8376cursor are added to the end of the previously copied text and commands
8377that copy text backwards add it to the beginning of the previously
8378copied text. This way, the words in the text stay in the proper
8379order.
8380
8381Like @code{kill-region}, the @code{copy-region-as-kill} function makes
8382use of the @code{last-command} variable that keeps track of the
8383previous Emacs command.
8384
8385@menu
8386* last-command & this-command::
8387* kill-append function::
8388* kill-new function::
8389@end menu
8390
8cda6f8f 8391@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 8392@node last-command & this-command
8cda6f8f
GM
8393@unnumberedsubsubsec @code{last-command} and @code{this-command}
8394@end ifnottex
8395
8396Normally, whenever a function is executed, Emacs sets the value of
8397@code{this-command} to the function being executed (which in this case
8398would be @code{copy-region-as-kill}). At the same time, Emacs sets
8399the value of @code{last-command} to the previous value of
8400@code{this-command}.
8401
8402In the first part of the body of the @code{copy-region-as-kill}
8403function, an @code{if} expression determines whether the value of
8404@code{last-command} is @code{kill-region}. If so, the then-part of
8405the @code{if} expression is evaluated; it uses the @code{kill-append}
8406function to concatenate the text copied at this call to the function
8407with the text already in the first element (the @sc{car}) of the kill
8408ring. On the other hand, if the value of @code{last-command} is not
8409@code{kill-region}, then the @code{copy-region-as-kill} function
8410attaches a new element to the kill ring using the @code{kill-new}
8411function.
8412
8413@need 1250
8414The @code{if} expression reads as follows; it uses @code{eq}:
8415
8416@smallexample
8417@group
8418 (if (eq last-command 'kill-region)
8419 ;; @r{then-part}
8420 (kill-append (filter-buffer-substring beg end) (< end beg))
8421 ;; @r{else-part}
8422 (kill-new (filter-buffer-substring beg end)))
8423@end group
8424@end smallexample
8425
8426@findex filter-buffer-substring
8427(The @code{filter-buffer-substring} function returns a filtered
8428substring of the buffer, if any. Optionally---the arguments are not
8429here, so neither is done---the function may delete the initial text or
8430return the text without its properties; this function is a replacement
8431for the older @code{buffer-substring} function, which came before text
8432properties were implemented.)
8433
8434@findex eq @r{(example of use)}
8435@noindent
8436The @code{eq} function tests whether its first argument is the same Lisp
8437object as its second argument. The @code{eq} function is similar to the
8438@code{equal} function in that it is used to test for equality, but
8439differs in that it determines whether two representations are actually
8440the same object inside the computer, but with different names.
8441@code{equal} determines whether the structure and contents of two
8442expressions are the same.
8443
8444If the previous command was @code{kill-region}, then the Emacs Lisp
8445interpreter calls the @code{kill-append} function
8446
d6adf7e7 8447@node kill-append function
8cda6f8f
GM
8448@unnumberedsubsubsec The @code{kill-append} function
8449@findex kill-append
8450
8451@need 800
8452The @code{kill-append} function looks like this:
8453
8454@c in GNU Emacs 22
8455@smallexample
8456@group
8457(defun kill-append (string before-p &optional yank-handler)
8458 "Append STRING to the end of the latest kill in the kill ring.
8459If BEFORE-P is non-nil, prepend STRING to the kill.
8460@dots{} "
8461 (let* ((cur (car kill-ring)))
8462 (kill-new (if before-p (concat string cur) (concat cur string))
8463 (or (= (length cur) 0)
8464 (equal yank-handler
8465 (get-text-property 0 'yank-handler cur)))
8466 yank-handler)))
8467@end group
8468@end smallexample
8469
8470@ignore
8471was:
8472(defun kill-append (string before-p)
8473 "Append STRING to the end of the latest kill in the kill ring.
8474If BEFORE-P is non-nil, prepend STRING to the kill.
8475If `interprogram-cut-function' is set, pass the resulting kill to
8476it."
8477 (kill-new (if before-p
8478 (concat string (car kill-ring))
8479 (concat (car kill-ring) string))
8480 t))
8481@end ignore
8482
8483@noindent
8484The @code{kill-append} function is fairly straightforward. It uses
8485the @code{kill-new} function, which we will discuss in more detail in
8486a moment.
8487
8488(Also, the function provides an optional argument called
8489@code{yank-handler}; when invoked, this argument tells the function
8490how to deal with properties added to the text, such as `bold' or
8491`italics'.)
8492
8493@c !!! bug in GNU Emacs 22 version of kill-append ?
8494It has a @code{let*} function to set the value of the first element of
8495the kill ring to @code{cur}. (I do not know why the function does not
8496use @code{let} instead; only one value is set in the expression.
8497Perhaps this is a bug that produces no problems?)
8498
8499Consider the conditional that is one of the two arguments to
8500@code{kill-new}. It uses @code{concat} to concatenate the new text to
8501the @sc{car} of the kill ring. Whether it prepends or appends the
8502text depends on the results of an @code{if} expression:
8503
8504@smallexample
8505@group
8506(if before-p ; @r{if-part}
8507 (concat string cur) ; @r{then-part}
8508 (concat cur string)) ; @r{else-part}
8509@end group
8510@end smallexample
8511
8512@noindent
8513If the region being killed is before the region that was killed in the
8514last command, then it should be prepended before the material that was
8515saved in the previous kill; and conversely, if the killed text follows
8516what was just killed, it should be appended after the previous text.
8517The @code{if} expression depends on the predicate @code{before-p} to
8518decide whether the newly saved text should be put before or after the
8519previously saved text.
8520
8521The symbol @code{before-p} is the name of one of the arguments to
8522@code{kill-append}. When the @code{kill-append} function is
8523evaluated, it is bound to the value returned by evaluating the actual
8524argument. In this case, this is the expression @code{(< end beg)}.
8525This expression does not directly determine whether the killed text in
8526this command is located before or after the kill text of the last
8527command; what it does is determine whether the value of the variable
8528@code{end} is less than the value of the variable @code{beg}. If it
8529is, it means that the user is most likely heading towards the
8530beginning of the buffer. Also, the result of evaluating the predicate
8531expression, @code{(< end beg)}, will be true and the text will be
8532prepended before the previous text. On the other hand, if the value of
8533the variable @code{end} is greater than the value of the variable
8534@code{beg}, the text will be appended after the previous text.
8535
8536@need 800
8537When the newly saved text will be prepended, then the string with the new
8538text will be concatenated before the old text:
8539
8540@smallexample
8541(concat string cur)
8542@end smallexample
8543
8544@need 1200
8545@noindent
8546But if the text will be appended, it will be concatenated
8547after the old text:
8548
8549@smallexample
8550(concat cur string))
8551@end smallexample
8552
8553To understand how this works, we first need to review the
8554@code{concat} function. The @code{concat} function links together or
8555unites two strings of text. The result is a string. For example:
8556
8557@smallexample
8558@group
8559(concat "abc" "def")
8560 @result{} "abcdef"
8561@end group
8562
8563@group
8564(concat "new "
8565 (car '("first element" "second element")))
8566 @result{} "new first element"
8567
8568(concat (car
8569 '("first element" "second element")) " modified")
8570 @result{} "first element modified"
8571@end group
8572@end smallexample
8573
8574We can now make sense of @code{kill-append}: it modifies the contents
8575of the kill ring. The kill ring is a list, each element of which is
8576saved text. The @code{kill-append} function uses the @code{kill-new}
8577function which in turn uses the @code{setcar} function.
8578
d6adf7e7 8579@node kill-new function
8cda6f8f
GM
8580@unnumberedsubsubsec The @code{kill-new} function
8581@findex kill-new
8582
8583@c in GNU Emacs 22, additional documentation to kill-new:
8584@ignore
8585Optional third arguments YANK-HANDLER controls how the STRING is later
8586inserted into a buffer; see `insert-for-yank' for details.
8587When a yank handler is specified, STRING must be non-empty (the yank
8588handler, if non-nil, is stored as a `yank-handler' text property on STRING).
8589
8590When the yank handler has a non-nil PARAM element, the original STRING
8591argument is not used by `insert-for-yank'. However, since Lisp code
8592may access and use elements from the kill ring directly, the STRING
8593argument should still be a \"useful\" string for such uses."
8594@end ignore
8595@need 1200
8596The @code{kill-new} function looks like this:
8597
8598@smallexample
8599@group
8600(defun kill-new (string &optional replace yank-handler)
8601 "Make STRING the latest kill in the kill ring.
8602Set `kill-ring-yank-pointer' to point to it.
8603
8604If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, apply it to STRING.
8605Optional second argument REPLACE non-nil means that STRING will replace
8606the front of the kill ring, rather than being added to the list.
8607@dots{}"
8608@end group
8609@group
8610 (if (> (length string) 0)
8611 (if yank-handler
8612 (put-text-property 0 (length string)
8613 'yank-handler yank-handler string))
8614 (if yank-handler
8615 (signal 'args-out-of-range
8616 (list string "yank-handler specified for empty string"))))
8617@end group
8618@group
8619 (if (fboundp 'menu-bar-update-yank-menu)
8620 (menu-bar-update-yank-menu string (and replace (car kill-ring))))
8621@end group
8622@group
8623 (if (and replace kill-ring)
8624 (setcar kill-ring string)
8625 (push string kill-ring)
8626 (if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
8627 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil)))
8628@end group
8629@group
8630 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
8631 (if interprogram-cut-function
8632 (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))
8633@end group
8634@end smallexample
8635@ignore
8636was:
8637(defun kill-new (string &optional replace)
8638 "Make STRING the latest kill in the kill ring.
8639Set the kill-ring-yank pointer to point to it.
8640If `interprogram-cut-function' is non-nil, apply it to STRING.
8641Optional second argument REPLACE non-nil means that STRING will replace
8642the front of the kill ring, rather than being added to the list."
8643 (and (fboundp 'menu-bar-update-yank-menu)
8644 (menu-bar-update-yank-menu string (and replace (car kill-ring))))
8645 (if (and replace kill-ring)
8646 (setcar kill-ring string)
8647 (setq kill-ring (cons string kill-ring))
8648 (if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
8649 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil)))
8650 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
8651 (if interprogram-cut-function
8652 (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))
8653@end ignore
8654
8655(Notice that the function is not interactive.)
8656
8657As usual, we can look at this function in parts.
8658
8659The function definition has an optional @code{yank-handler} argument,
8660which when invoked tells the function how to deal with properties
8661added to the text, such as `bold' or `italics'. We will skip that.
8662
8663@need 1200
8664The first line of the documentation makes sense:
8665
8666@smallexample
8667Make STRING the latest kill in the kill ring.
8668@end smallexample
8669
8670@noindent
8671Let's skip over the rest of the documentation for the moment.
8672
8673@noindent
8674Also, let's skip over the initial @code{if} expression and those lines
8675of code involving @code{menu-bar-update-yank-menu}. We will explain
8676them below.
8677
8678@need 1200
8679The critical lines are these:
8680
8681@smallexample
8682@group
8683 (if (and replace kill-ring)
8684 ;; @r{then}
8685 (setcar kill-ring string)
8686@end group
8687@group
8688 ;; @r{else}
8689 (push string kill-ring)
8690@end group
8691@group
8692 (setq kill-ring (cons string kill-ring))
8693 (if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
8694 ;; @r{avoid overly long kill ring}
8695 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil)))
8696@end group
8697@group
8698 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
8699 (if interprogram-cut-function
8700 (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))
8701@end group
8702@end smallexample
8703
8704The conditional test is @w{@code{(and replace kill-ring)}}.
8705This will be true when two conditions are met: the kill ring has
8706something in it, and the @code{replace} variable is true.
8707
8708@need 1250
8709When the @code{kill-append} function sets @code{replace} to be true
8710and when the kill ring has at least one item in it, the @code{setcar}
8711expression is executed:
8712
8713@smallexample
8714(setcar kill-ring string)
8715@end smallexample
8716
8717The @code{setcar} function actually changes the first element of the
8718@code{kill-ring} list to the value of @code{string}. It replaces the
8719first element.
8720
8721@need 1250
8722On the other hand, if the kill ring is empty, or replace is false, the
8723else-part of the condition is executed:
8724
8725@smallexample
8726(push string kill-ring)
8727@end smallexample
8728
8729@noindent
8730@need 1250
8731@code{push} puts its first argument onto the second. It is similar to
8732the older
8733
8734@smallexample
8735(setq kill-ring (cons string kill-ring))
8736@end smallexample
8737
8738@noindent
8739@need 1250
8740or the newer
8741
8742@smallexample
8743(add-to-list kill-ring string)
8744@end smallexample
8745
8746@noindent
8747When it is false, the expression first constructs a new version of the
8748kill ring by prepending @code{string} to the existing kill ring as a
8749new element (that is what the @code{push} does). Then it executes a
8750second @code{if} clause. This second @code{if} clause keeps the kill
8751ring from growing too long.
8752
8753Let's look at these two expressions in order.
8754
8755The @code{push} line of the else-part sets the new value of the kill
8756ring to what results from adding the string being killed to the old
8757kill ring.
8758
8759We can see how this works with an example.
8760
8761@need 800
8762First,
8763
8764@smallexample
8765(setq example-list '("here is a clause" "another clause"))
8766@end smallexample
8767
8768@need 1200
8769@noindent
8770After evaluating this expression with @kbd{C-x C-e}, you can evaluate
8771@code{example-list} and see what it returns:
8772
8773@smallexample
8774@group
8775example-list
8776 @result{} ("here is a clause" "another clause")
8777@end group
8778@end smallexample
8779
8780@need 1200
8781@noindent
8782Now, we can add a new element on to this list by evaluating the
8783following expression:
8784@findex push, @r{example}
8785
8786@smallexample
8787(push "a third clause" example-list)
8788@end smallexample
8789
8790@need 800
8791@noindent
8792When we evaluate @code{example-list}, we find its value is:
8793
8794@smallexample
8795@group
8796example-list
8797 @result{} ("a third clause" "here is a clause" "another clause")
8798@end group
8799@end smallexample
8800
8801@noindent
8802Thus, the third clause is added to the list by @code{push}.
8803
8804@need 1200
8805Now for the second part of the @code{if} clause. This expression
8806keeps the kill ring from growing too long. It looks like this:
8807
8808@smallexample
8809@group
8810(if (> (length kill-ring) kill-ring-max)
8811 (setcdr (nthcdr (1- kill-ring-max) kill-ring) nil))
8812@end group
8813@end smallexample
8814
8815The code checks whether the length of the kill ring is greater than
8816the maximum permitted length. This is the value of
8817@code{kill-ring-max} (which is 60, by default). If the length of the
8818kill ring is too long, then this code sets the last element of the
8819kill ring to @code{nil}. It does this by using two functions,
8820@code{nthcdr} and @code{setcdr}.
8821
8822We looked at @code{setcdr} earlier (@pxref{setcdr, , @code{setcdr}}).
8823It sets the @sc{cdr} of a list, just as @code{setcar} sets the
8824@sc{car} of a list. In this case, however, @code{setcdr} will not be
8825setting the @sc{cdr} of the whole kill ring; the @code{nthcdr}
8826function is used to cause it to set the @sc{cdr} of the next to last
8827element of the kill ring---this means that since the @sc{cdr} of the
8828next to last element is the last element of the kill ring, it will set
8829the last element of the kill ring.
8830
8831@findex nthcdr, @r{example}
8832The @code{nthcdr} function works by repeatedly taking the @sc{cdr} of a
8833list---it takes the @sc{cdr} of the @sc{cdr} of the @sc{cdr}
8834@dots{} It does this @var{N} times and returns the results.
8835(@xref{nthcdr, , @code{nthcdr}}.)
8836
8837@findex setcdr, @r{example}
8838Thus, if we had a four element list that was supposed to be three
8839elements long, we could set the @sc{cdr} of the next to last element
8840to @code{nil}, and thereby shorten the list. (If you set the last
8841element to some other value than @code{nil}, which you could do, then
8842you would not have shortened the list. @xref{setcdr, ,
8843@code{setcdr}}.)
8844
8845You can see shortening by evaluating the following three expressions
8846in turn. First set the value of @code{trees} to @code{(maple oak pine
8847birch)}, then set the @sc{cdr} of its second @sc{cdr} to @code{nil}
8848and then find the value of @code{trees}:
8849
8850@smallexample
8851@group
8852(setq trees '(maple oak pine birch))
8853 @result{} (maple oak pine birch)
8854@end group
8855
8856@group
8857(setcdr (nthcdr 2 trees) nil)
8858 @result{} nil
8859
8860trees
8861 @result{} (maple oak pine)
8862@end group
8863@end smallexample
8864
8865@noindent
8866(The value returned by the @code{setcdr} expression is @code{nil} since
8867that is what the @sc{cdr} is set to.)
8868
8869To repeat, in @code{kill-new}, the @code{nthcdr} function takes the
8870@sc{cdr} a number of times that is one less than the maximum permitted
8871size of the kill ring and @code{setcdr} sets the @sc{cdr} of that
8872element (which will be the rest of the elements in the kill ring) to
8873@code{nil}. This prevents the kill ring from growing too long.
8874
8875@need 800
8876The next to last expression in the @code{kill-new} function is
8877
8878@smallexample
8879(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
8880@end smallexample
8881
8882The @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is a global variable that is set to be
8883the @code{kill-ring}.
8884
8885Even though the @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is called a
8886@samp{pointer}, it is a variable just like the kill ring. However, the
8887name has been chosen to help humans understand how the variable is used.
8888
8889@need 1200
8890Now, to return to an early expression in the body of the function:
8891
8892@smallexample
8893@group
8894 (if (fboundp 'menu-bar-update-yank-menu)
8895 (menu-bar-update-yank-menu string (and replace (car kill-ring))))
8896@end group
8897@end smallexample
8898
8899@noindent
8900It starts with an @code{if} expression
8901
8902In this case, the expression tests first to see whether
8903@code{menu-bar-update-yank-menu} exists as a function, and if so,
8904calls it. The @code{fboundp} function returns true if the symbol it
8905is testing has a function definition that `is not void'. If the
8906symbol's function definition were void, we would receive an error
8907message, as we did when we created errors intentionally (@pxref{Making
8908Errors, , Generate an Error Message}).
8909
8910@noindent
8911The then-part contains an expression whose first element is the
8912function @code{and}.
8913
8914@findex and
8915The @code{and} special form evaluates each of its arguments until one
8916of the arguments returns a value of @code{nil}, in which case the
8917@code{and} expression returns @code{nil}; however, if none of the
8918arguments returns a value of @code{nil}, the value resulting from
8919evaluating the last argument is returned. (Since such a value is not
8920@code{nil}, it is considered true in Emacs Lisp.) In other words, an
8921@code{and} expression returns a true value only if all its arguments
8922are true. (@xref{Second Buffer Related Review}.)
8923
8924The expression determines whether the second argument to
8925@code{menu-bar-update-yank-menu} is true or not.
8926@ignore
8927 ;; If we're supposed to be extending an existing string, and that
8928 ;; string really is at the front of the menu, then update it in place.
8929@end ignore
8930
8931@code{menu-bar-update-yank-menu} is one of the functions that make it
8932possible to use the `Select and Paste' menu in the Edit item of a menu
8933bar; using a mouse, you can look at the various pieces of text you
8934have saved and select one piece to paste.
8935
8936The last expression in the @code{kill-new} function adds the newly
8937copied string to whatever facility exists for copying and pasting
8938among different programs running in a windowing system. In the X
8939Windowing system, for example, the @code{x-select-text} function takes
1df7defd 8940the string and stores it in memory operated by X@. You can paste the
8cda6f8f
GM
8941string in another program, such as an Xterm.
8942
8943@need 1200
8944The expression looks like this:
8945
8946@smallexample
8947@group
8948 (if interprogram-cut-function
8949 (funcall interprogram-cut-function string (not replace))))
8950@end group
8951@end smallexample
8952
8953If an @code{interprogram-cut-function} exists, then Emacs executes
8954@code{funcall}, which in turn calls its first argument as a function
8955and passes the remaining arguments to it. (Incidentally, as far as I
8956can see, this @code{if} expression could be replaced by an @code{and}
8957expression similar to the one in the first part of the function.)
8958
8959We are not going to discuss windowing systems and other programs
8960further, but merely note that this is a mechanism that enables GNU
8961Emacs to work easily and well with other programs.
8962
8963This code for placing text in the kill ring, either concatenated with
8964an existing element or as a new element, leads us to the code for
8965bringing back text that has been cut out of the buffer---the yank
8966commands. However, before discussing the yank commands, it is better
8967to learn how lists are implemented in a computer. This will make
8968clear such mysteries as the use of the term `pointer'. But before
8969that, we will digress into C.
8970
8971@ignore
8972@c is this true in Emacs 22? Does not seems to be
8973
8974 (If the @w{@code{(< end beg))}}
8975expression is true, @code{kill-append} prepends the string to the just
8976previously clipped text. For a detailed discussion, see
8977@ref{kill-append function, , The @code{kill-append} function}.)
8978
8979If you then yank back the text, i.e., `paste' it, you get both
8980pieces of text at once. That way, if you delete two words in a row,
8981and then yank them back, you get both words, in their proper order,
8982with one yank. (The @w{@code{(< end beg))}} expression makes sure the
8983order is correct.)
8984
8985On the other hand, if the previous command is not @code{kill-region},
8986then the @code{kill-new} function is called, which adds the text to
8987the kill ring as the latest item, and sets the
8988@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable to point to it.
8989@end ignore
8990@ignore
8991
8992@c Evidently, changed for Emacs 22. The zap-to-char command does not
8993@c use the delete-and-extract-region function
8994
89952006 Oct 26, the Digression into C is now OK but should come after
8996copy-region-as-kill and filter-buffer-substring
8997
89982006 Oct 24
8999In Emacs 22,
9000copy-region-as-kill is short, 12 lines, and uses
9001filter-buffer-substring, which is longer, 39 lines
9002and has delete-and-extract-region in it.
9003delete-and-extract-region is written in C.
9004
9005see Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar}
9006@end ignore
9007
d6adf7e7 9008@node Digression into C
8cda6f8f
GM
9009@section Digression into C
9010@findex delete-and-extract-region
9011@cindex C, a digression into
9012@cindex Digression into C
9013
9014The @code{copy-region-as-kill} function (@pxref{copy-region-as-kill, ,
9015@code{copy-region-as-kill}}) uses the @code{filter-buffer-substring}
9016function, which in turn uses the @code{delete-and-extract-region}
9017function. It removes the contents of a region and you cannot get them
9018back.
9019
9020Unlike the other code discussed here, the
9021@code{delete-and-extract-region} function is not written in Emacs
9022Lisp; it is written in C and is one of the primitives of the GNU Emacs
9023system. Since it is very simple, I will digress briefly from Lisp and
9024describe it here.
9025
2d7d2325
GM
9026@c GNU Emacs 24 in src/editfns.c
9027@c the DEFUN for delete-and-extract-region
8cda6f8f
GM
9028
9029@need 1500
9030Like many of the other Emacs primitives,
9031@code{delete-and-extract-region} is written as an instance of a C
9032macro, a macro being a template for code. The complete macro looks
9033like this:
9034
9035@smallexample
9036@group
2d7d2325
GM
9037DEFUN ("delete-and-extract-region", Fdelete_and_extract_region,
9038 Sdelete_and_extract_region, 2, 2, 0,
9039 doc: /* Delete the text between START and END and return it. */)
9040 (Lisp_Object start, Lisp_Object end)
8cda6f8f 9041@{
8cda6f8f 9042 validate_region (&start, &end);
2d7d2325
GM
9043 if (XINT (start) == XINT (end))
9044 return empty_unibyte_string;
9045 return del_range_1 (XINT (start), XINT (end), 1, 1);
8cda6f8f
GM
9046@}
9047@end group
9048@end smallexample
9049
9050Without going into the details of the macro writing process, let me
9051point out that this macro starts with the word @code{DEFUN}. The word
9052@code{DEFUN} was chosen since the code serves the same purpose as
9053@code{defun} does in Lisp. (The @code{DEFUN} C macro is defined in
9054@file{emacs/src/lisp.h}.)
9055
9056The word @code{DEFUN} is followed by seven parts inside of
9057parentheses:
9058
9059@itemize @bullet
9060@item
9061The first part is the name given to the function in Lisp,
9062@code{delete-and-extract-region}.
9063
9064@item
9065The second part is the name of the function in C,
9066@code{Fdelete_and_extract_region}. By convention, it starts with
9067@samp{F}. Since C does not use hyphens in names, underscores are used
9068instead.
9069
9070@item
9071The third part is the name for the C constant structure that records
9072information on this function for internal use. It is the name of the
9073function in C but begins with an @samp{S} instead of an @samp{F}.
9074
9075@item
9076The fourth and fifth parts specify the minimum and maximum number of
9077arguments the function can have. This function demands exactly 2
9078arguments.
9079
9080@item
9081The sixth part is nearly like the argument that follows the
9082@code{interactive} declaration in a function written in Lisp: a letter
9083followed, perhaps, by a prompt. The only difference from the Lisp is
9084when the macro is called with no arguments. Then you write a @code{0}
9085(which is a `null string'), as in this macro.
9086
9087If you were to specify arguments, you would place them between
9088quotation marks. The C macro for @code{goto-char} includes
9089@code{"NGoto char: "} in this position to indicate that the function
9090expects a raw prefix, in this case, a numerical location in a buffer,
9091and provides a prompt.
9092
9093@item
9094The seventh part is a documentation string, just like the one for a
2d7d2325
GM
9095function written in Emacs Lisp. This is written as a C comment. (When
9096you build Emacs, the program @command{lib-src/make-docfile} extracts
9097these comments and uses them to make the ``real'' documentation.)
8cda6f8f
GM
9098@end itemize
9099
9100@need 1200
9101In a C macro, the formal parameters come next, with a statement of
9102what kind of object they are, followed by what might be called the `body'
9103of the macro. For @code{delete-and-extract-region} the `body'
9104consists of the following four lines:
9105
9106@smallexample
9107@group
9108validate_region (&start, &end);
9109if (XINT (start) == XINT (end))
2d7d2325 9110 return empty_unibyte_string;
8cda6f8f
GM
9111return del_range_1 (XINT (start), XINT (end), 1, 1);
9112@end group
9113@end smallexample
9114
2d7d2325 9115The @code{validate_region} function checks whether the values
8cda6f8f
GM
9116passed as the beginning and end of the region are the proper type and
9117are within range. If the beginning and end positions are the same,
2d7d2325 9118then return an empty string.
8cda6f8f
GM
9119
9120The @code{del_range_1} function actually deletes the text. It is a
9121complex function we will not look into. It updates the buffer and
9122does other things. However, it is worth looking at the two arguments
9123passed to @code{del_range}. These are @w{@code{XINT (start)}} and
9124@w{@code{XINT (end)}}.
9125
9126As far as the C language is concerned, @code{start} and @code{end} are
9127two integers that mark the beginning and end of the region to be
9128deleted@footnote{More precisely, and requiring more expert knowledge
9129to understand, the two integers are of type `Lisp_Object', which can
9130also be a C union instead of an integer type.}.
9131
9132In early versions of Emacs, these two numbers were thirty-two bits
9133long, but the code is slowly being generalized to handle other
9134lengths. Three of the available bits are used to specify the type of
9135information; the remaining bits are used as `content'.
9136
9137@samp{XINT} is a C macro that extracts the relevant number from the
9138longer collection of bits; the three other bits are discarded.
9139
9140@need 800
9141The command in @code{delete-and-extract-region} looks like this:
9142
9143@smallexample
9144del_range_1 (XINT (start), XINT (end), 1, 1);
9145@end smallexample
9146
9147@noindent
9148It deletes the region between the beginning position, @code{start},
9149and the ending position, @code{end}.
9150
9151From the point of view of the person writing Lisp, Emacs is all very
9152simple; but hidden underneath is a great deal of complexity to make it
9153all work.
9154
d6adf7e7 9155@node defvar
8cda6f8f
GM
9156@section Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar}
9157@findex defvar
9158@cindex Initializing a variable
9159@cindex Variable initialization
9160
9161@ignore
91622006 Oct 24
9163In Emacs 22,
9164copy-region-as-kill is short, 12 lines, and uses
9165filter-buffer-substring, which is longer, 39 lines
9166and has delete-and-extract-region in it.
9167delete-and-extract-region is written in C.
9168
9169see Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar}
9170
9171@end ignore
9172
9173The @code{copy-region-as-kill} function is written in Emacs Lisp. Two
9174functions within it, @code{kill-append} and @code{kill-new}, copy a
9175region in a buffer and save it in a variable called the
9176@code{kill-ring}. This section describes how the @code{kill-ring}
9177variable is created and initialized using the @code{defvar} special
9178form.
9179
9180(Again we note that the term @code{kill-ring} is a misnomer. The text
9181that is clipped out of the buffer can be brought back; it is not a ring
9182of corpses, but a ring of resurrectable text.)
9183
9184In Emacs Lisp, a variable such as the @code{kill-ring} is created and
9185given an initial value by using the @code{defvar} special form. The
9186name comes from ``define variable''.
9187
9188The @code{defvar} special form is similar to @code{setq} in that it sets
9189the value of a variable. It is unlike @code{setq} in two ways: first,
9190it only sets the value of the variable if the variable does not already
9191have a value. If the variable already has a value, @code{defvar} does
9192not override the existing value. Second, @code{defvar} has a
9193documentation string.
9194
2325c82f
XF
9195(There is a related macro, @code{defcustom}, designed for variables
9196that people customize. It has more features than @code{defvar}.
9197(@xref{defcustom, , Setting Variables with @code{defcustom}}.)
9198
8cda6f8f
GM
9199@menu
9200* See variable current value::
9201* defvar and asterisk::
9202@end menu
9203
8cda6f8f 9204@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 9205@node See variable current value
8cda6f8f
GM
9206@unnumberedsubsec Seeing the Current Value of a Variable
9207@end ifnottex
9208
9209You can see the current value of a variable, any variable, by using
9210the @code{describe-variable} function, which is usually invoked by
9211typing @kbd{C-h v}. If you type @kbd{C-h v} and then @code{kill-ring}
9212(followed by @key{RET}) when prompted, you will see what is in your
9213current kill ring---this may be quite a lot! Conversely, if you have
9214been doing nothing this Emacs session except read this document, you
9215may have nothing in it. Also, you will see the documentation for
9216@code{kill-ring}:
9217
9218@smallexample
9219@group
9220Documentation:
9221List of killed text sequences.
9222Since the kill ring is supposed to interact nicely with cut-and-paste
9223facilities offered by window systems, use of this variable should
9224@end group
9225@group
9226interact nicely with `interprogram-cut-function' and
9227`interprogram-paste-function'. The functions `kill-new',
9228`kill-append', and `current-kill' are supposed to implement this
9229interaction; you may want to use them instead of manipulating the kill
9230ring directly.
9231@end group
9232@end smallexample
9233
9234@need 800
9235The kill ring is defined by a @code{defvar} in the following way:
9236
9237@smallexample
9238@group
9239(defvar kill-ring nil
9240 "List of killed text sequences.
9241@dots{}")
9242@end group
9243@end smallexample
9244
9245@noindent
9246In this variable definition, the variable is given an initial value of
9247@code{nil}, which makes sense, since if you have saved nothing, you want
9248nothing back if you give a @code{yank} command. The documentation
9249string is written just like the documentation string of a @code{defun}.
9250As with the documentation string of the @code{defun}, the first line of
9251the documentation should be a complete sentence, since some commands,
9252like @code{apropos}, print only the first line of documentation.
9253Succeeding lines should not be indented; otherwise they look odd when
9254you use @kbd{C-h v} (@code{describe-variable}).
9255
d6adf7e7 9256@node defvar and asterisk
8cda6f8f
GM
9257@subsection @code{defvar} and an asterisk
9258@findex defvar @r{for a user customizable variable}
9259@findex defvar @r{with an asterisk}
9260
9261In the past, Emacs used the @code{defvar} special form both for
9262internal variables that you would not expect a user to change and for
9263variables that you do expect a user to change. Although you can still
9264use @code{defvar} for user customizable variables, please use
09b98a01 9265@code{defcustom} instead, since it provides a path into
8cda6f8f
GM
9266the Customization commands. (@xref{defcustom, , Specifying Variables
9267using @code{defcustom}}.)
9268
9269When you specified a variable using the @code{defvar} special form,
943157cf
GM
9270you could distinguish a variable that a user might want to change from
9271others by typing an asterisk, @samp{*}, in the first column of its
9272documentation string. For example:
8cda6f8f
GM
9273
9274@smallexample
9275@group
9276(defvar shell-command-default-error-buffer nil
9277 "*Buffer name for `shell-command' @dots{} error output.
9278@dots{} ")
9279@end group
9280@end smallexample
9281
9282@findex set-variable
9283@noindent
9284You could (and still can) use the @code{set-variable} command to
9285change the value of @code{shell-command-default-error-buffer}
9286temporarily. However, options set using @code{set-variable} are set
9287only for the duration of your editing session. The new values are not
9288saved between sessions. Each time Emacs starts, it reads the original
9289value, unless you change the value within your @file{.emacs} file,
9290either by setting it manually or by using @code{customize}.
9291@xref{Emacs Initialization, , Your @file{.emacs} File}.
9292
9293For me, the major use of the @code{set-variable} command is to suggest
9294variables that I might want to set in my @file{.emacs} file. There
f99f1641 9295are now more than 700 such variables, far too many to remember
8cda6f8f
GM
9296readily. Fortunately, you can press @key{TAB} after calling the
9297@code{M-x set-variable} command to see the list of variables.
9298(@xref{Examining, , Examining and Setting Variables, emacs,
9299The GNU Emacs Manual}.)
9300
9301@need 1250
d6adf7e7 9302@node cons & search-fwd Review
8cda6f8f
GM
9303@section Review
9304
9305Here is a brief summary of some recently introduced functions.
9306
9307@table @code
9308@item car
9309@itemx cdr
9310@code{car} returns the first element of a list; @code{cdr} returns the
9311second and subsequent elements of a list.
9312
9313@need 1250
9314For example:
9315
9316@smallexample
9317@group
9318(car '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7))
9319 @result{} 1
9320(cdr '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7))
9321 @result{} (2 3 4 5 6 7)
9322@end group
9323@end smallexample
9324
9325@item cons
9326@code{cons} constructs a list by prepending its first argument to its
9327second argument.
9328
9329@need 1250
9330For example:
9331
9332@smallexample
9333@group
9334(cons 1 '(2 3 4))
9335 @result{} (1 2 3 4)
9336@end group
9337@end smallexample
9338
9339@item funcall
9340@code{funcall} evaluates its first argument as a function. It passes
9341its remaining arguments to its first argument.
9342
9343@item nthcdr
9344Return the result of taking @sc{cdr} `n' times on a list.
9345@iftex
9346The
9347@tex
9348$n^{th}$
9349@end tex
9350@code{cdr}.
9351@end iftex
9352The `rest of the rest', as it were.
9353
9354@need 1250
9355For example:
9356
9357@smallexample
9358@group
9359(nthcdr 3 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7))
9360 @result{} (4 5 6 7)
9361@end group
9362@end smallexample
9363
9364@item setcar
9365@itemx setcdr
9366@code{setcar} changes the first element of a list; @code{setcdr}
9367changes the second and subsequent elements of a list.
9368
9369@need 1250
9370For example:
9371
9372@smallexample
9373@group
9374(setq triple '(1 2 3))
9375
9376(setcar triple '37)
9377
9378triple
9379 @result{} (37 2 3)
9380
9381(setcdr triple '("foo" "bar"))
9382
9383triple
9384 @result{} (37 "foo" "bar")
9385@end group
9386@end smallexample
9387
9388@item progn
9389Evaluate each argument in sequence and then return the value of the
9390last.
9391
9392@need 1250
9393For example:
9394
9395@smallexample
9396@group
9397(progn 1 2 3 4)
9398 @result{} 4
9399@end group
9400@end smallexample
9401
9402@item save-restriction
9403Record whatever narrowing is in effect in the current buffer, if any,
9404and restore that narrowing after evaluating the arguments.
9405
9406@item search-forward
9407Search for a string, and if the string is found, move point. With a
9408regular expression, use the similar @code{re-search-forward}.
9409(@xref{Regexp Search, , Regular Expression Searches}, for an
9410explanation of regular expression patterns and searches.)
9411
9412@need 1250
9413@noindent
9414@code{search-forward} and @code{re-search-forward} take four
9415arguments:
9416
9417@enumerate
9418@item
9419The string or regular expression to search for.
9420
9421@item
9422Optionally, the limit of the search.
9423
9424@item
9425Optionally, what to do if the search fails, return @code{nil} or an
9426error message.
9427
9428@item
9429Optionally, how many times to repeat the search; if negative, the
9430search goes backwards.
9431@end enumerate
9432
9433@item kill-region
9434@itemx delete-and-extract-region
9435@itemx copy-region-as-kill
9436
9437@code{kill-region} cuts the text between point and mark from the
9438buffer and stores that text in the kill ring, so you can get it back
9439by yanking.
9440
9441@code{copy-region-as-kill} copies the text between point and mark into
9442the kill ring, from which you can get it by yanking. The function
9443does not cut or remove the text from the buffer.
9444@end table
9445
9446@code{delete-and-extract-region} removes the text between point and
9447mark from the buffer and throws it away. You cannot get it back.
9448(This is not an interactive command.)
9449
9450@need 1500
d6adf7e7 9451@node search Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
9452@section Searching Exercises
9453
9454@itemize @bullet
9455@item
9456Write an interactive function that searches for a string. If the
9457search finds the string, leave point after it and display a message
9458that says ``Found!''. (Do not use @code{search-forward} for the name
9459of this function; if you do, you will overwrite the existing version of
9460@code{search-forward} that comes with Emacs. Use a name such as
9461@code{test-search} instead.)
9462
9463@item
9464Write a function that prints the third element of the kill ring in the
9465echo area, if any; if the kill ring does not contain a third element,
9466print an appropriate message.
9467@end itemize
9468
d6adf7e7 9469@node List Implementation
8cda6f8f
GM
9470@chapter How Lists are Implemented
9471@cindex Lists in a computer
9472
9473In Lisp, atoms are recorded in a straightforward fashion; if the
9474implementation is not straightforward in practice, it is, nonetheless,
9475straightforward in theory. The atom @samp{rose}, for example, is
9476recorded as the four contiguous letters @samp{r}, @samp{o}, @samp{s},
9477@samp{e}. A list, on the other hand, is kept differently. The mechanism
9478is equally simple, but it takes a moment to get used to the idea. A
9479list is kept using a series of pairs of pointers. In the series, the
9480first pointer in each pair points to an atom or to another list, and the
9481second pointer in each pair points to the next pair, or to the symbol
9482@code{nil}, which marks the end of the list.
9483
9484A pointer itself is quite simply the electronic address of what is
9485pointed to. Hence, a list is kept as a series of electronic addresses.
9486
9487@menu
9488* Lists diagrammed::
9489* Symbols as Chest:: Exploring a powerful metaphor.
9490* List Exercise::
9491@end menu
9492
8cda6f8f 9493@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 9494@node Lists diagrammed
8cda6f8f
GM
9495@unnumberedsec Lists diagrammed
9496@end ifnottex
9497
9498For example, the list @code{(rose violet buttercup)} has three elements,
9499@samp{rose}, @samp{violet}, and @samp{buttercup}. In the computer, the
9500electronic address of @samp{rose} is recorded in a segment of computer
9501memory along with the address that gives the electronic address of where
9502the atom @samp{violet} is located; and that address (the one that tells
9503where @samp{violet} is located) is kept along with an address that tells
9504where the address for the atom @samp{buttercup} is located.
9505
9506@need 1200
9507This sounds more complicated than it is and is easier seen in a diagram:
9508
9509@c clear print-postscript-figures
9510@c !!! cons-cell-diagram #1
9511@ifnottex
9512@smallexample
9513@group
9514 ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
9515 |___|___|--> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
9516 | | |
9517 | | |
9518 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9519@end group
9520@end smallexample
9521@end ifnottex
9522@ifset print-postscript-figures
9523@sp 1
9524@tex
9525@center @image{cons-1}
9526%%%% old method of including an image
9527% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
9528% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/cons-1.eps}}
9529% \catcode`\@=0 %
9530@end tex
9531@sp 1
9532@end ifset
9533@ifclear print-postscript-figures
9534@iftex
9535@smallexample
9536@group
9537 ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
9538 |___|___|--> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
9539 | | |
9540 | | |
9541 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9542@end group
9543@end smallexample
9544@end iftex
9545@end ifclear
9546
9547@noindent
9548In the diagram, each box represents a word of computer memory that
9549holds a Lisp object, usually in the form of a memory address. The boxes,
1df7defd 9550i.e., the addresses, are in pairs. Each arrow points to what the address
8cda6f8f
GM
9551is the address of, either an atom or another pair of addresses. The
9552first box is the electronic address of @samp{rose} and the arrow points
9553to @samp{rose}; the second box is the address of the next pair of boxes,
9554the first part of which is the address of @samp{violet} and the second
9555part of which is the address of the next pair. The very last box
9556points to the symbol @code{nil}, which marks the end of the list.
9557
9558@need 1200
9559When a variable is set to a list with a function such as @code{setq},
9560it stores the address of the first box in the variable. Thus,
9561evaluation of the expression
9562
9563@smallexample
9564(setq bouquet '(rose violet buttercup))
9565@end smallexample
9566
9567@need 1250
9568@noindent
9569creates a situation like this:
9570
9571@c cons-cell-diagram #2
9572@ifnottex
9573@smallexample
9574@group
9575bouquet
9576 |
9577 | ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
9578 --> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
9579 | | |
9580 | | |
9581 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9582@end group
9583@end smallexample
9584@end ifnottex
9585@ifset print-postscript-figures
9586@sp 1
9587@tex
9588@center @image{cons-2}
9589%%%% old method of including an image
9590% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
9591% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/cons-2.eps}}
9592% \catcode`\@=0 %
9593@end tex
9594@sp 1
9595@end ifset
9596@ifclear print-postscript-figures
9597@iftex
9598@smallexample
9599@group
9600bouquet
9601 |
9602 | ___ ___ ___ ___ ___ ___
9603 --> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
9604 | | |
9605 | | |
9606 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9607@end group
9608@end smallexample
9609@end iftex
9610@end ifclear
9611
9612@noindent
9613In this example, the symbol @code{bouquet} holds the address of the first
9614pair of boxes.
9615
9616@need 1200
9617This same list can be illustrated in a different sort of box notation
9618like this:
9619
9620@c cons-cell-diagram #2a
9621@ifnottex
9622@smallexample
9623@group
9624bouquet
9625 |
9626 | -------------- --------------- ----------------
9627 | | car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
9628 -->| rose | o------->| violet | o------->| butter- | nil |
9629 | | | | | | | cup | |
9630 -------------- --------------- ----------------
9631@end group
9632@end smallexample
9633@end ifnottex
9634@ifset print-postscript-figures
9635@sp 1
9636@tex
9637@center @image{cons-2a}
9638%%%% old method of including an image
9639% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
9640% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/cons-2a.eps}}
9641% \catcode`\@=0 %
9642@end tex
9643@sp 1
9644@end ifset
9645@ifclear print-postscript-figures
9646@iftex
9647@smallexample
9648@group
9649bouquet
9650 |
9651 | -------------- --------------- ----------------
9652 | | car | cdr | | car | cdr | | car | cdr |
9653 -->| rose | o------->| violet | o------->| butter- | nil |
9654 | | | | | | | cup | |
9655 -------------- --------------- ----------------
9656@end group
9657@end smallexample
9658@end iftex
9659@end ifclear
9660
9661(Symbols consist of more than pairs of addresses, but the structure of
9662a symbol is made up of addresses. Indeed, the symbol @code{bouquet}
9663consists of a group of address-boxes, one of which is the address of
9664the printed word @samp{bouquet}, a second of which is the address of a
9665function definition attached to the symbol, if any, a third of which
9666is the address of the first pair of address-boxes for the list
9667@code{(rose violet buttercup)}, and so on. Here we are showing that
9668the symbol's third address-box points to the first pair of
9669address-boxes for the list.)
9670
9671If a symbol is set to the @sc{cdr} of a list, the list itself is not
9672changed; the symbol simply has an address further down the list. (In
9673the jargon, @sc{car} and @sc{cdr} are `non-destructive'.) Thus,
9674evaluation of the following expression
9675
9676@smallexample
9677(setq flowers (cdr bouquet))
9678@end smallexample
9679
9680@need 800
9681@noindent
9682produces this:
9683
9684@c cons-cell-diagram #3
9685@ifnottex
9686@sp 1
9687@smallexample
9688@group
9689bouquet flowers
9690 | |
9691 | ___ ___ | ___ ___ ___ ___
9692 --> | | | --> | | | | | |
9693 |___|___|----> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
9694 | | |
9695 | | |
9696 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9697@end group
9698@end smallexample
9699@sp 1
9700@end ifnottex
9701@ifset print-postscript-figures
9702@sp 1
9703@tex
9704@center @image{cons-3}
9705%%%% old method of including an image
9706% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
9707% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/cons-3.eps}}
9708% \catcode`\@=0 %
9709@end tex
9710@sp 1
9711@end ifset
9712@ifclear print-postscript-figures
9713@iftex
9714@sp 1
9715@smallexample
9716@group
9717bouquet flowers
9718 | |
9719 | ___ ___ | ___ ___ ___ ___
9720 --> | | | --> | | | | | |
9721 |___|___|----> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
9722 | | |
9723 | | |
9724 --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9725@end group
9726@end smallexample
9727@sp 1
9728@end iftex
9729@end ifclear
9730
9731@noindent
9732The value of @code{flowers} is @code{(violet buttercup)}, which is
9733to say, the symbol @code{flowers} holds the address of the pair of
9734address-boxes, the first of which holds the address of @code{violet},
9735and the second of which holds the address of @code{buttercup}.
9736
9737A pair of address-boxes is called a @dfn{cons cell} or @dfn{dotted
9738pair}. @xref{Cons Cell Type, , Cons Cell and List Types, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
9739Reference Manual}, and @ref{Dotted Pair Notation, , Dotted Pair
9740Notation, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more
9741information about cons cells and dotted pairs.
9742
9743@need 1200
9744The function @code{cons} adds a new pair of addresses to the front of
9745a series of addresses like that shown above. For example, evaluating
9746the expression
9747
9748@smallexample
9749(setq bouquet (cons 'lily bouquet))
9750@end smallexample
9751
9752@need 1500
9753@noindent
9754produces:
9755
9756@c cons-cell-diagram #4
9757@ifnottex
9758@sp 1
9759@smallexample
9760@group
9761bouquet flowers
9762 | |
9763 | ___ ___ ___ ___ | ___ ___ ___ ___
9764 --> | | | | | | --> | | | | | |
9765 |___|___|----> |___|___|----> |___|___|---->|___|___|--> nil
9766 | | | |
9767 | | | |
9768 --> lily --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9769@end group
9770@end smallexample
9771@sp 1
9772@end ifnottex
9773@ifset print-postscript-figures
9774@sp 1
9775@tex
9776@center @image{cons-4}
9777%%%% old method of including an image
9778% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
9779% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/cons-4.eps}}
9780% \catcode`\@=0 %
9781@end tex
9782@sp 1
9783@end ifset
9784@ifclear print-postscript-figures
9785@iftex
9786@sp 1
9787@smallexample
9788@group
9789bouquet flowers
9790 | |
9791 | ___ ___ ___ ___ | ___ ___ ___ ___
9792 --> | | | | | | --> | | | | | |
9793 |___|___|----> |___|___|----> |___|___|---->|___|___|--> nil
9794 | | | |
9795 | | | |
9796 --> lily --> rose --> violet --> buttercup
9797@end group
9798@end smallexample
9799@sp 1
9800@end iftex
9801@end ifclear
9802
9803@need 1200
9804@noindent
9805However, this does not change the value of the symbol
9806@code{flowers}, as you can see by evaluating the following,
9807
9808@smallexample
9809(eq (cdr (cdr bouquet)) flowers)
9810@end smallexample
9811
9812@noindent
9813which returns @code{t} for true.
9814
9815Until it is reset, @code{flowers} still has the value
9816@code{(violet buttercup)}; that is, it has the address of the cons
9817cell whose first address is of @code{violet}. Also, this does not
9818alter any of the pre-existing cons cells; they are all still there.
9819
9820Thus, in Lisp, to get the @sc{cdr} of a list, you just get the address
9821of the next cons cell in the series; to get the @sc{car} of a list,
9822you get the address of the first element of the list; to @code{cons} a
9823new element on a list, you add a new cons cell to the front of the list.
9824That is all there is to it! The underlying structure of Lisp is
9825brilliantly simple!
9826
9827And what does the last address in a series of cons cells refer to? It
9828is the address of the empty list, of @code{nil}.
9829
9830In summary, when a Lisp variable is set to a value, it is provided with
9831the address of the list to which the variable refers.
9832
d6adf7e7 9833@node Symbols as Chest
8cda6f8f
GM
9834@section Symbols as a Chest of Drawers
9835@cindex Symbols as a Chest of Drawers
9836@cindex Chest of Drawers, metaphor for a symbol
9837@cindex Drawers, Chest of, metaphor for a symbol
9838
9839In an earlier section, I suggested that you might imagine a symbol as
9840being a chest of drawers. The function definition is put in one
9841drawer, the value in another, and so on. What is put in the drawer
9842holding the value can be changed without affecting the contents of the
9843drawer holding the function definition, and vice-verse.
9844
9845Actually, what is put in each drawer is the address of the value or
9846function definition. It is as if you found an old chest in the attic,
9847and in one of its drawers you found a map giving you directions to
9848where the buried treasure lies.
9849
9850(In addition to its name, symbol definition, and variable value, a
9851symbol has a `drawer' for a @dfn{property list} which can be used to
9852record other information. Property lists are not discussed here; see
9853@ref{Property Lists, , Property Lists, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
9854Reference Manual}.)
9855
9856@need 1500
9857Here is a fanciful representation:
9858
9859@c chest-of-drawers diagram
9860@ifnottex
9861@sp 1
9862@smallexample
9863@group
9864 Chest of Drawers Contents of Drawers
9865
9866 __ o0O0o __
9867 / \
9868 ---------------------
9869 | directions to | [map to]
9870 | symbol name | bouquet
9871 | |
9872 +---------------------+
9873 | directions to |
9874 | symbol definition | [none]
9875 | |
9876 +---------------------+
9877 | directions to | [map to]
9878 | variable value | (rose violet buttercup)
9879 | |
9880 +---------------------+
9881 | directions to |
9882 | property list | [not described here]
9883 | |
9884 +---------------------+
9885 |/ \|
9886@end group
9887@end smallexample
9888@sp 1
9889@end ifnottex
9890@ifset print-postscript-figures
9891@sp 1
9892@tex
9893@center @image{drawers}
9894%%%% old method of including an image
9895% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
9896% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/drawers.eps}}
9897% \catcode`\@=0 %
9898@end tex
9899@sp 1
9900@end ifset
9901@ifclear print-postscript-figures
9902@iftex
9903@sp 1
9904@smallexample
9905@group
9906 Chest of Drawers Contents of Drawers
9907
9908 __ o0O0o __
9909 / \
9910 ---------------------
9911 | directions to | [map to]
9912 | symbol name | bouquet
9913 | |
9914 +---------------------+
9915 | directions to |
9916 | symbol definition | [none]
9917 | |
9918 +---------------------+
9919 | directions to | [map to]
9920 | variable value | (rose violet buttercup)
9921 | |
9922 +---------------------+
9923 | directions to |
9924 | property list | [not described here]
9925 | |
9926 +---------------------+
9927 |/ \|
9928@end group
9929@end smallexample
9930@sp 1
9931@end iftex
9932@end ifclear
9933
d6adf7e7 9934@node List Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
9935@section Exercise
9936
9937Set @code{flowers} to @code{violet} and @code{buttercup}. Cons two
9938more flowers on to this list and set this new list to
9939@code{more-flowers}. Set the @sc{car} of @code{flowers} to a fish.
9940What does the @code{more-flowers} list now contain?
9941
d6adf7e7 9942@node Yanking
8cda6f8f
GM
9943@chapter Yanking Text Back
9944@findex yank
9945@cindex Text retrieval
9946@cindex Retrieving text
9947@cindex Pasting text
9948
9949Whenever you cut text out of a buffer with a `kill' command in GNU Emacs,
9950you can bring it back with a `yank' command. The text that is cut out of
9951the buffer is put in the kill ring and the yank commands insert the
9952appropriate contents of the kill ring back into a buffer (not necessarily
9953the original buffer).
9954
9955A simple @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank}) command inserts the first item from
9956the kill ring into the current buffer. If the @kbd{C-y} command is
9957followed immediately by @kbd{M-y}, the first element is replaced by
9958the second element. Successive @kbd{M-y} commands replace the second
9959element with the third, fourth, or fifth element, and so on. When the
9960last element in the kill ring is reached, it is replaced by the first
9961element and the cycle is repeated. (Thus the kill ring is called a
9962`ring' rather than just a `list'. However, the actual data structure
9963that holds the text is a list.
9964@xref{Kill Ring, , Handling the Kill Ring}, for the details of how the
9965list is handled as a ring.)
9966
9967@menu
9968* Kill Ring Overview::
9969* kill-ring-yank-pointer:: The kill ring is a list.
9970* yank nthcdr Exercises:: The @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable.
9971@end menu
9972
d6adf7e7 9973@node Kill Ring Overview
8cda6f8f
GM
9974@section Kill Ring Overview
9975@cindex Kill ring overview
9976
9977The kill ring is a list of textual strings. This is what it looks like:
9978
9979@smallexample
9980("some text" "a different piece of text" "yet more text")
9981@end smallexample
9982
9983If this were the contents of my kill ring and I pressed @kbd{C-y}, the
9984string of characters saying @samp{some text} would be inserted in this
9985buffer where my cursor is located.
9986
9987The @code{yank} command is also used for duplicating text by copying it.
9988The copied text is not cut from the buffer, but a copy of it is put on the
9989kill ring and is inserted by yanking it back.
9990
9991Three functions are used for bringing text back from the kill ring:
9992@code{yank}, which is usually bound to @kbd{C-y}; @code{yank-pop},
9993which is usually bound to @kbd{M-y}; and @code{rotate-yank-pointer},
9994which is used by the two other functions.
9995
9996These functions refer to the kill ring through a variable called the
9997@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer}. Indeed, the insertion code for both the
9998@code{yank} and @code{yank-pop} functions is:
9999
10000@smallexample
10001(insert (car kill-ring-yank-pointer))
10002@end smallexample
10003
10004@noindent
10005(Well, no more. In GNU Emacs 22, the function has been replaced by
10006@code{insert-for-yank} which calls @code{insert-for-yank-1}
10007repetitively for each @code{yank-handler} segment. In turn,
10008@code{insert-for-yank-1} strips text properties from the inserted text
10009according to @code{yank-excluded-properties}. Otherwise, it is just
10010like @code{insert}. We will stick with plain @code{insert} since it
10011is easier to understand.)
10012
10013To begin to understand how @code{yank} and @code{yank-pop} work, it is
10014first necessary to look at the @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable.
10015
d6adf7e7 10016@node kill-ring-yank-pointer
8cda6f8f
GM
10017@section The @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} Variable
10018
10019@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is a variable, just as @code{kill-ring} is
10020a variable. It points to something by being bound to the value of what
10021it points to, like any other Lisp variable.
10022
10023@need 1000
10024Thus, if the value of the kill ring is:
10025
10026@smallexample
10027("some text" "a different piece of text" "yet more text")
10028@end smallexample
10029
10030@need 1250
10031@noindent
10032and the @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} points to the second clause, the
10033value of @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is:
10034
10035@smallexample
10036("a different piece of text" "yet more text")
10037@end smallexample
10038
10039As explained in the previous chapter (@pxref{List Implementation}), the
10040computer does not keep two different copies of the text being pointed to
10041by both the @code{kill-ring} and the @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer}. The
10042words ``a different piece of text'' and ``yet more text'' are not
10043duplicated. Instead, the two Lisp variables point to the same pieces of
10044text. Here is a diagram:
10045
10046@c cons-cell-diagram #5
10047@ifnottex
10048@smallexample
10049@group
10050kill-ring kill-ring-yank-pointer
10051 | |
10052 | ___ ___ | ___ ___ ___ ___
10053 ---> | | | --> | | | | | |
10054 |___|___|----> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
10055 | | |
10056 | | |
10057 | | --> "yet more text"
10058 | |
10059 | --> "a different piece of text"
10060 |
10061 --> "some text"
10062@end group
10063@end smallexample
10064@sp 1
10065@end ifnottex
10066@ifset print-postscript-figures
10067@sp 1
10068@tex
10069@center @image{cons-5}
10070%%%% old method of including an image
10071% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
10072% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/cons-5.eps}}
10073% \catcode`\@=0 %
10074@end tex
10075@sp 1
10076@end ifset
10077@ifclear print-postscript-figures
10078@iftex
10079@smallexample
10080@group
10081kill-ring kill-ring-yank-pointer
10082 | |
10083 | ___ ___ | ___ ___ ___ ___
10084 ---> | | | --> | | | | | |
10085 |___|___|----> |___|___|--> |___|___|--> nil
10086 | | |
10087 | | |
10088 | | --> "yet more text"
10089 | |
10090 | --> "a different piece of text
10091 |
10092 --> "some text"
10093@end group
10094@end smallexample
10095@sp 1
10096@end iftex
10097@end ifclear
10098
10099Both the variable @code{kill-ring} and the variable
10100@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} are pointers. But the kill ring itself is
10101usually described as if it were actually what it is composed of. The
10102@code{kill-ring} is spoken of as if it were the list rather than that it
10103points to the list. Conversely, the @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is
10104spoken of as pointing to a list.
10105
10106These two ways of talking about the same thing sound confusing at first but
10107make sense on reflection. The kill ring is generally thought of as the
10108complete structure of data that holds the information of what has recently
10109been cut out of the Emacs buffers. The @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer}
10110on the other hand, serves to indicate---that is, to `point to'---that part
10111of the kill ring of which the first element (the @sc{car}) will be
10112inserted.
10113
10114@ignore
10115In GNU Emacs 22, the @code{kill-new} function calls
10116
10117@code{(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)}
10118
10119(defun rotate-yank-pointer (arg)
10120 "Rotate the yanking point in the kill ring.
10121With argument, rotate that many kills forward (or backward, if negative)."
10122 (interactive "p")
10123 (current-kill arg))
10124
10125(defun current-kill (n &optional do-not-move)
10126 "Rotate the yanking point by N places, and then return that kill.
10127If N is zero, `interprogram-paste-function' is set, and calling it
10128returns a string, then that string is added to the front of the
10129kill ring and returned as the latest kill.
10130If optional arg DO-NOT-MOVE is non-nil, then don't actually move the
10131yanking point; just return the Nth kill forward."
10132 (let ((interprogram-paste (and (= n 0)
10133 interprogram-paste-function
10134 (funcall interprogram-paste-function))))
10135 (if interprogram-paste
10136 (progn
10137 ;; Disable the interprogram cut function when we add the new
10138 ;; text to the kill ring, so Emacs doesn't try to own the
10139 ;; selection, with identical text.
10140 (let ((interprogram-cut-function nil))
10141 (kill-new interprogram-paste))
10142 interprogram-paste)
10143 (or kill-ring (error "Kill ring is empty"))
10144 (let ((ARGth-kill-element
10145 (nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
10146 (length kill-ring))
10147 kill-ring)))
10148 (or do-not-move
10149 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element))
10150 (car ARGth-kill-element)))))
10151
10152@end ignore
10153
10154@need 1500
d6adf7e7 10155@node yank nthcdr Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
10156@section Exercises with @code{yank} and @code{nthcdr}
10157
10158@itemize @bullet
10159@item
10160Using @kbd{C-h v} (@code{describe-variable}), look at the value of
10161your kill ring. Add several items to your kill ring; look at its
10162value again. Using @kbd{M-y} (@code{yank-pop)}, move all the way
10163around the kill ring. How many items were in your kill ring? Find
10164the value of @code{kill-ring-max}. Was your kill ring full, or could
10165you have kept more blocks of text within it?
10166
10167@item
10168Using @code{nthcdr} and @code{car}, construct a series of expressions
10169to return the first, second, third, and fourth elements of a list.
10170@end itemize
10171
d6adf7e7 10172@node Loops & Recursion
8cda6f8f
GM
10173@chapter Loops and Recursion
10174@cindex Loops and recursion
10175@cindex Recursion and loops
10176@cindex Repetition (loops)
10177
10178Emacs Lisp has two primary ways to cause an expression, or a series of
10179expressions, to be evaluated repeatedly: one uses a @code{while}
10180loop, and the other uses @dfn{recursion}.
10181
10182Repetition can be very valuable. For example, to move forward four
10183sentences, you need only write a program that will move forward one
10184sentence and then repeat the process four times. Since a computer does
10185not get bored or tired, such repetitive action does not have the
10186deleterious effects that excessive or the wrong kinds of repetition can
10187have on humans.
10188
10189People mostly write Emacs Lisp functions using @code{while} loops and
10190their kin; but you can use recursion, which provides a very powerful
10191way to think about and then to solve problems@footnote{You can write
10192recursive functions to be frugal or wasteful of mental or computer
10193resources; as it happens, methods that people find easy---that are
10194frugal of `mental resources'---sometimes use considerable computer
10195resources. Emacs was designed to run on machines that we now consider
10196limited and its default settings are conservative. You may want to
10197increase the values of @code{max-specpdl-size} and
10198@code{max-lisp-eval-depth}. In my @file{.emacs} file, I set them to
1019915 and 30 times their default value.}.
10200
10201@menu
10202* while:: Causing a stretch of code to repeat.
10203* dolist dotimes::
10204* Recursion:: Causing a function to call itself.
10205* Looping exercise::
10206@end menu
10207
d6adf7e7 10208@node while
8cda6f8f
GM
10209@section @code{while}
10210@cindex Loops
10211@findex while
10212
10213The @code{while} special form tests whether the value returned by
10214evaluating its first argument is true or false. This is similar to what
10215the Lisp interpreter does with an @code{if}; what the interpreter does
10216next, however, is different.
10217
10218In a @code{while} expression, if the value returned by evaluating the
10219first argument is false, the Lisp interpreter skips the rest of the
10220expression (the @dfn{body} of the expression) and does not evaluate it.
10221However, if the value is true, the Lisp interpreter evaluates the body
10222of the expression and then again tests whether the first argument to
10223@code{while} is true or false. If the value returned by evaluating the
10224first argument is again true, the Lisp interpreter again evaluates the
10225body of the expression.
10226
10227@need 1200
10228The template for a @code{while} expression looks like this:
10229
10230@smallexample
10231@group
10232(while @var{true-or-false-test}
10233 @var{body}@dots{})
10234@end group
10235@end smallexample
10236
10237@menu
10238* Looping with while:: Repeat so long as test returns true.
10239* Loop Example:: A @code{while} loop that uses a list.
10240* print-elements-of-list:: Uses @code{while}, @code{car}, @code{cdr}.
10241* Incrementing Loop:: A loop with an incrementing counter.
10242* Incrementing Loop Details::
10243* Decrementing Loop:: A loop with a decrementing counter.
10244@end menu
10245
8cda6f8f 10246@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 10247@node Looping with while
8cda6f8f
GM
10248@unnumberedsubsec Looping with @code{while}
10249@end ifnottex
10250
10251So long as the true-or-false-test of the @code{while} expression
10252returns a true value when it is evaluated, the body is repeatedly
10253evaluated. This process is called a loop since the Lisp interpreter
10254repeats the same thing again and again, like an airplane doing a loop.
10255When the result of evaluating the true-or-false-test is false, the
10256Lisp interpreter does not evaluate the rest of the @code{while}
10257expression and `exits the loop'.
10258
10259Clearly, if the value returned by evaluating the first argument to
10260@code{while} is always true, the body following will be evaluated
10261again and again @dots{} and again @dots{} forever. Conversely, if the
10262value returned is never true, the expressions in the body will never
10263be evaluated. The craft of writing a @code{while} loop consists of
10264choosing a mechanism such that the true-or-false-test returns true
10265just the number of times that you want the subsequent expressions to
10266be evaluated, and then have the test return false.
10267
10268The value returned by evaluating a @code{while} is the value of the
10269true-or-false-test. An interesting consequence of this is that a
10270@code{while} loop that evaluates without error will return @code{nil}
10271or false regardless of whether it has looped 1 or 100 times or none at
10272all. A @code{while} expression that evaluates successfully never
10273returns a true value! What this means is that @code{while} is always
10274evaluated for its side effects, which is to say, the consequences of
10275evaluating the expressions within the body of the @code{while} loop.
10276This makes sense. It is not the mere act of looping that is desired,
10277but the consequences of what happens when the expressions in the loop
10278are repeatedly evaluated.
10279
d6adf7e7 10280@node Loop Example
8cda6f8f
GM
10281@subsection A @code{while} Loop and a List
10282
10283A common way to control a @code{while} loop is to test whether a list
10284has any elements. If it does, the loop is repeated; but if it does not,
10285the repetition is ended. Since this is an important technique, we will
10286create a short example to illustrate it.
10287
10288A simple way to test whether a list has elements is to evaluate the
10289list: if it has no elements, it is an empty list and will return the
10290empty list, @code{()}, which is a synonym for @code{nil} or false. On
10291the other hand, a list with elements will return those elements when it
10292is evaluated. Since Emacs Lisp considers as true any value that is not
10293@code{nil}, a list that returns elements will test true in a
10294@code{while} loop.
10295
10296@need 1200
10297For example, you can set the variable @code{empty-list} to @code{nil} by
10298evaluating the following @code{setq} expression:
10299
10300@smallexample
10301(setq empty-list ())
10302@end smallexample
10303
10304@noindent
10305After evaluating the @code{setq} expression, you can evaluate the
10306variable @code{empty-list} in the usual way, by placing the cursor after
10307the symbol and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}; @code{nil} will appear in your
10308echo area:
10309
10310@smallexample
10311empty-list
10312@end smallexample
10313
10314On the other hand, if you set a variable to be a list with elements, the
10315list will appear when you evaluate the variable, as you can see by
10316evaluating the following two expressions:
10317
10318@smallexample
10319@group
10320(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
10321
10322animals
10323@end group
10324@end smallexample
10325
10326Thus, to create a @code{while} loop that tests whether there are any
10327items in the list @code{animals}, the first part of the loop will be
10328written like this:
10329
10330@smallexample
10331@group
10332(while animals
10333 @dots{}
10334@end group
10335@end smallexample
10336
10337@noindent
10338When the @code{while} tests its first argument, the variable
10339@code{animals} is evaluated. It returns a list. So long as the list
10340has elements, the @code{while} considers the results of the test to be
10341true; but when the list is empty, it considers the results of the test
10342to be false.
10343
10344To prevent the @code{while} loop from running forever, some mechanism
10345needs to be provided to empty the list eventually. An oft-used
10346technique is to have one of the subsequent forms in the @code{while}
10347expression set the value of the list to be the @sc{cdr} of the list.
10348Each time the @code{cdr} function is evaluated, the list will be made
10349shorter, until eventually only the empty list will be left. At this
10350point, the test of the @code{while} loop will return false, and the
10351arguments to the @code{while} will no longer be evaluated.
10352
10353For example, the list of animals bound to the variable @code{animals}
10354can be set to be the @sc{cdr} of the original list with the
10355following expression:
10356
10357@smallexample
10358(setq animals (cdr animals))
10359@end smallexample
10360
10361@noindent
10362If you have evaluated the previous expressions and then evaluate this
10363expression, you will see @code{(giraffe lion tiger)} appear in the echo
10364area. If you evaluate the expression again, @code{(lion tiger)} will
10365appear in the echo area. If you evaluate it again and yet again,
10366@code{(tiger)} appears and then the empty list, shown by @code{nil}.
10367
10368A template for a @code{while} loop that uses the @code{cdr} function
10369repeatedly to cause the true-or-false-test eventually to test false
10370looks like this:
10371
10372@smallexample
10373@group
10374(while @var{test-whether-list-is-empty}
10375 @var{body}@dots{}
10376 @var{set-list-to-cdr-of-list})
10377@end group
10378@end smallexample
10379
10380This test and use of @code{cdr} can be put together in a function that
10381goes through a list and prints each element of the list on a line of its
10382own.
10383
d6adf7e7 10384@node print-elements-of-list
8cda6f8f
GM
10385@subsection An Example: @code{print-elements-of-list}
10386@findex print-elements-of-list
10387
10388The @code{print-elements-of-list} function illustrates a @code{while}
10389loop with a list.
10390
10391@cindex @file{*scratch*} buffer
10392The function requires several lines for its output. If you are
10393reading this in a recent instance of GNU Emacs,
10394@c GNU Emacs 21, GNU Emacs 22, or a later version,
10395you can evaluate the following expression inside of Info, as usual.
10396
10397If you are using an earlier version of Emacs, you need to copy the
10398necessary expressions to your @file{*scratch*} buffer and evaluate
10399them there. This is because the echo area had only one line in the
10400earlier versions.
10401
10402You can copy the expressions by marking the beginning of the region
10403with @kbd{C-@key{SPC}} (@code{set-mark-command}), moving the cursor to
10404the end of the region and then copying the region using @kbd{M-w}
10405(@code{kill-ring-save}, which calls @code{copy-region-as-kill} and
10406then provides visual feedback). In the @file{*scratch*}
10407buffer, you can yank the expressions back by typing @kbd{C-y}
10408(@code{yank}).
10409
10410After you have copied the expressions to the @file{*scratch*} buffer,
10411evaluate each expression in turn. Be sure to evaluate the last
10412expression, @code{(print-elements-of-list animals)}, by typing
10413@kbd{C-u C-x C-e}, that is, by giving an argument to
10414@code{eval-last-sexp}. This will cause the result of the evaluation
10415to be printed in the @file{*scratch*} buffer instead of being printed
10416in the echo area. (Otherwise you will see something like this in your
10417echo area: @code{^Jgazelle^J^Jgiraffe^J^Jlion^J^Jtiger^Jnil}, in which
10418each @samp{^J} stands for a `newline'.)
10419
10420@need 1500
10421In a recent instance of GNU Emacs, you can evaluate these expressions
10422directly in the Info buffer, and the echo area will grow to show the
10423results.
10424
10425@smallexample
10426@group
10427(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
10428
10429(defun print-elements-of-list (list)
10430 "Print each element of LIST on a line of its own."
10431 (while list
10432 (print (car list))
10433 (setq list (cdr list))))
10434
10435(print-elements-of-list animals)
10436@end group
10437@end smallexample
10438
10439@need 1200
10440@noindent
10441When you evaluate the three expressions in sequence, you will see
10442this:
10443
10444@smallexample
10445@group
10446gazelle
10447
10448giraffe
10449
10450lion
10451
10452tiger
10453nil
10454@end group
10455@end smallexample
10456
10457Each element of the list is printed on a line of its own (that is what
10458the function @code{print} does) and then the value returned by the
10459function is printed. Since the last expression in the function is the
10460@code{while} loop, and since @code{while} loops always return
10461@code{nil}, a @code{nil} is printed after the last element of the list.
10462
d6adf7e7 10463@node Incrementing Loop
8cda6f8f
GM
10464@subsection A Loop with an Incrementing Counter
10465
10466A loop is not useful unless it stops when it ought. Besides
10467controlling a loop with a list, a common way of stopping a loop is to
10468write the first argument as a test that returns false when the correct
10469number of repetitions are complete. This means that the loop must
10470have a counter---an expression that counts how many times the loop
10471repeats itself.
10472
8cda6f8f 10473@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 10474@node Incrementing Loop Details
8cda6f8f
GM
10475@unnumberedsubsec Details of an Incrementing Loop
10476@end ifnottex
10477
10478The test for a loop with an incrementing counter can be an expression
10479such as @code{(< count desired-number)} which returns @code{t} for
10480true if the value of @code{count} is less than the
10481@code{desired-number} of repetitions and @code{nil} for false if the
10482value of @code{count} is equal to or is greater than the
10483@code{desired-number}. The expression that increments the count can
10484be a simple @code{setq} such as @code{(setq count (1+ count))}, where
10485@code{1+} is a built-in function in Emacs Lisp that adds 1 to its
10486argument. (The expression @w{@code{(1+ count)}} has the same result
10487as @w{@code{(+ count 1)}}, but is easier for a human to read.)
10488
10489@need 1250
10490The template for a @code{while} loop controlled by an incrementing
10491counter looks like this:
10492
10493@smallexample
10494@group
10495@var{set-count-to-initial-value}
10496(while (< count desired-number) ; @r{true-or-false-test}
10497 @var{body}@dots{}
10498 (setq count (1+ count))) ; @r{incrementer}
10499@end group
10500@end smallexample
10501
10502@noindent
10503Note that you need to set the initial value of @code{count}; usually it
10504is set to 1.
10505
10506@menu
10507* Incrementing Example:: Counting pebbles in a triangle.
10508* Inc Example parts:: The parts of the function definition.
10509* Inc Example altogether:: Putting the function definition together.
10510@end menu
10511
d6adf7e7 10512@node Incrementing Example
8cda6f8f
GM
10513@unnumberedsubsubsec Example with incrementing counter
10514
10515Suppose you are playing on the beach and decide to make a triangle of
10516pebbles, putting one pebble in the first row, two in the second row,
10517three in the third row and so on, like this:
10518
10519@sp 1
10520@c pebble diagram
10521@ifnottex
10522@smallexample
10523@group
10524 *
10525 * *
10526 * * *
10527 * * * *
10528@end group
10529@end smallexample
10530@end ifnottex
10531@iftex
10532@smallexample
10533@group
10534 @bullet{}
10535 @bullet{} @bullet{}
10536 @bullet{} @bullet{} @bullet{}
10537 @bullet{} @bullet{} @bullet{} @bullet{}
10538@end group
10539@end smallexample
10540@end iftex
10541@sp 1
10542
10543@noindent
10544(About 2500 years ago, Pythagoras and others developed the beginnings of
10545number theory by considering questions such as this.)
10546
10547Suppose you want to know how many pebbles you will need to make a
10548triangle with 7 rows?
10549
10550Clearly, what you need to do is add up the numbers from 1 to 7. There
10551are two ways to do this; start with the smallest number, one, and add up
10552the list in sequence, 1, 2, 3, 4 and so on; or start with the largest
10553number and add the list going down: 7, 6, 5, 4 and so on. Because both
10554mechanisms illustrate common ways of writing @code{while} loops, we will
10555create two examples, one counting up and the other counting down. In
10556this first example, we will start with 1 and add 2, 3, 4 and so on.
10557
10558If you are just adding up a short list of numbers, the easiest way to do
10559it is to add up all the numbers at once. However, if you do not know
10560ahead of time how many numbers your list will have, or if you want to be
10561prepared for a very long list, then you need to design your addition so
10562that what you do is repeat a simple process many times instead of doing
10563a more complex process once.
10564
10565For example, instead of adding up all the pebbles all at once, what you
10566can do is add the number of pebbles in the first row, 1, to the number
10567in the second row, 2, and then add the total of those two rows to the
10568third row, 3. Then you can add the number in the fourth row, 4, to the
10569total of the first three rows; and so on.
10570
10571The critical characteristic of the process is that each repetitive
10572action is simple. In this case, at each step we add only two numbers,
10573the number of pebbles in the row and the total already found. This
10574process of adding two numbers is repeated again and again until the last
10575row has been added to the total of all the preceding rows. In a more
10576complex loop the repetitive action might not be so simple, but it will
10577be simpler than doing everything all at once.
10578
d6adf7e7 10579@node Inc Example parts
8cda6f8f
GM
10580@unnumberedsubsubsec The parts of the function definition
10581
10582The preceding analysis gives us the bones of our function definition:
10583first, we will need a variable that we can call @code{total} that will
10584be the total number of pebbles. This will be the value returned by
10585the function.
10586
10587Second, we know that the function will require an argument: this
10588argument will be the total number of rows in the triangle. It can be
10589called @code{number-of-rows}.
10590
10591Finally, we need a variable to use as a counter. We could call this
10592variable @code{counter}, but a better name is @code{row-number}. That
10593is because what the counter does in this function is count rows, and a
10594program should be written to be as understandable as possible.
10595
10596When the Lisp interpreter first starts evaluating the expressions in the
10597function, the value of @code{total} should be set to zero, since we have
10598not added anything to it. Then the function should add the number of
10599pebbles in the first row to the total, and then add the number of
10600pebbles in the second to the total, and then add the number of
10601pebbles in the third row to the total, and so on, until there are no
10602more rows left to add.
10603
10604Both @code{total} and @code{row-number} are used only inside the
10605function, so they can be declared as local variables with @code{let}
10606and given initial values. Clearly, the initial value for @code{total}
10607should be 0. The initial value of @code{row-number} should be 1,
10608since we start with the first row. This means that the @code{let}
10609statement will look like this:
10610
10611@smallexample
10612@group
10613 (let ((total 0)
10614 (row-number 1))
10615 @var{body}@dots{})
10616@end group
10617@end smallexample
10618
10619After the internal variables are declared and bound to their initial
10620values, we can begin the @code{while} loop. The expression that serves
10621as the test should return a value of @code{t} for true so long as the
10622@code{row-number} is less than or equal to the @code{number-of-rows}.
10623(If the expression tests true only so long as the row number is less
10624than the number of rows in the triangle, the last row will never be
10625added to the total; hence the row number has to be either less than or
10626equal to the number of rows.)
10627
10628@need 1500
10629@findex <= @r{(less than or equal)}
10630Lisp provides the @code{<=} function that returns true if the value of
10631its first argument is less than or equal to the value of its second
10632argument and false otherwise. So the expression that the @code{while}
10633will evaluate as its test should look like this:
10634
10635@smallexample
10636(<= row-number number-of-rows)
10637@end smallexample
10638
10639The total number of pebbles can be found by repeatedly adding the number
10640of pebbles in a row to the total already found. Since the number of
10641pebbles in the row is equal to the row number, the total can be found by
10642adding the row number to the total. (Clearly, in a more complex
10643situation, the number of pebbles in the row might be related to the row
10644number in a more complicated way; if this were the case, the row number
10645would be replaced by the appropriate expression.)
10646
10647@smallexample
10648(setq total (+ total row-number))
10649@end smallexample
10650
10651@noindent
10652What this does is set the new value of @code{total} to be equal to the
10653sum of adding the number of pebbles in the row to the previous total.
10654
10655After setting the value of @code{total}, the conditions need to be
10656established for the next repetition of the loop, if there is one. This
10657is done by incrementing the value of the @code{row-number} variable,
10658which serves as a counter. After the @code{row-number} variable has
10659been incremented, the true-or-false-test at the beginning of the
10660@code{while} loop tests whether its value is still less than or equal to
10661the value of the @code{number-of-rows} and if it is, adds the new value
10662of the @code{row-number} variable to the @code{total} of the previous
10663repetition of the loop.
10664
10665@need 1200
10666The built-in Emacs Lisp function @code{1+} adds 1 to a number, so the
10667@code{row-number} variable can be incremented with this expression:
10668
10669@smallexample
10670(setq row-number (1+ row-number))
10671@end smallexample
10672
d6adf7e7 10673@node Inc Example altogether
8cda6f8f
GM
10674@unnumberedsubsubsec Putting the function definition together
10675
10676We have created the parts for the function definition; now we need to
10677put them together.
10678
10679@need 800
10680First, the contents of the @code{while} expression:
10681
10682@smallexample
10683@group
10684(while (<= row-number number-of-rows) ; @r{true-or-false-test}
10685 (setq total (+ total row-number))
10686 (setq row-number (1+ row-number))) ; @r{incrementer}
10687@end group
10688@end smallexample
10689
10690Along with the @code{let} expression varlist, this very nearly
10691completes the body of the function definition. However, it requires
10692one final element, the need for which is somewhat subtle.
10693
10694The final touch is to place the variable @code{total} on a line by
10695itself after the @code{while} expression. Otherwise, the value returned
10696by the whole function is the value of the last expression that is
10697evaluated in the body of the @code{let}, and this is the value
10698returned by the @code{while}, which is always @code{nil}.
10699
10700This may not be evident at first sight. It almost looks as if the
10701incrementing expression is the last expression of the whole function.
10702But that expression is part of the body of the @code{while}; it is the
10703last element of the list that starts with the symbol @code{while}.
10704Moreover, the whole of the @code{while} loop is a list within the body
10705of the @code{let}.
10706
10707@need 1250
10708In outline, the function will look like this:
10709
10710@smallexample
10711@group
10712(defun @var{name-of-function} (@var{argument-list})
10713 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
10714 (let (@var{varlist})
10715 (while (@var{true-or-false-test})
10716 @var{body-of-while}@dots{} )
10717 @dots{} )) ; @r{Need final expression here.}
10718@end group
10719@end smallexample
10720
10721The result of evaluating the @code{let} is what is going to be returned
10722by the @code{defun} since the @code{let} is not embedded within any
10723containing list, except for the @code{defun} as a whole. However, if
10724the @code{while} is the last element of the @code{let} expression, the
10725function will always return @code{nil}. This is not what we want!
10726Instead, what we want is the value of the variable @code{total}. This
10727is returned by simply placing the symbol as the last element of the list
10728starting with @code{let}. It gets evaluated after the preceding
10729elements of the list are evaluated, which means it gets evaluated after
10730it has been assigned the correct value for the total.
10731
10732It may be easier to see this by printing the list starting with
10733@code{let} all on one line. This format makes it evident that the
10734@var{varlist} and @code{while} expressions are the second and third
10735elements of the list starting with @code{let}, and the @code{total} is
10736the last element:
10737
10738@smallexample
10739@group
10740(let (@var{varlist}) (while (@var{true-or-false-test}) @var{body-of-while}@dots{} ) total)
10741@end group
10742@end smallexample
10743
10744@need 1200
10745Putting everything together, the @code{triangle} function definition
10746looks like this:
10747
10748@smallexample
10749@group
10750(defun triangle (number-of-rows) ; @r{Version with}
10751 ; @r{ incrementing counter.}
10752 "Add up the number of pebbles in a triangle.
10753The first row has one pebble, the second row two pebbles,
10754the third row three pebbles, and so on.
10755The argument is NUMBER-OF-ROWS."
10756@end group
10757@group
10758 (let ((total 0)
10759 (row-number 1))
10760 (while (<= row-number number-of-rows)
10761 (setq total (+ total row-number))
10762 (setq row-number (1+ row-number)))
10763 total))
10764@end group
10765@end smallexample
10766
10767@need 1200
10768After you have installed @code{triangle} by evaluating the function, you
10769can try it out. Here are two examples:
10770
10771@smallexample
10772@group
10773(triangle 4)
10774
10775(triangle 7)
10776@end group
10777@end smallexample
10778
10779@noindent
10780The sum of the first four numbers is 10 and the sum of the first seven
10781numbers is 28.
10782
d6adf7e7 10783@node Decrementing Loop
8cda6f8f
GM
10784@subsection Loop with a Decrementing Counter
10785
10786Another common way to write a @code{while} loop is to write the test
10787so that it determines whether a counter is greater than zero. So long
10788as the counter is greater than zero, the loop is repeated. But when
10789the counter is equal to or less than zero, the loop is stopped. For
10790this to work, the counter has to start out greater than zero and then
10791be made smaller and smaller by a form that is evaluated
10792repeatedly.
10793
10794The test will be an expression such as @code{(> counter 0)} which
10795returns @code{t} for true if the value of @code{counter} is greater
10796than zero, and @code{nil} for false if the value of @code{counter} is
10797equal to or less than zero. The expression that makes the number
10798smaller and smaller can be a simple @code{setq} such as @code{(setq
10799counter (1- counter))}, where @code{1-} is a built-in function in
10800Emacs Lisp that subtracts 1 from its argument.
10801
10802@need 1250
10803The template for a decrementing @code{while} loop looks like this:
10804
10805@smallexample
10806@group
10807(while (> counter 0) ; @r{true-or-false-test}
10808 @var{body}@dots{}
10809 (setq counter (1- counter))) ; @r{decrementer}
10810@end group
10811@end smallexample
10812
10813@menu
10814* Decrementing Example:: More pebbles on the beach.
10815* Dec Example parts:: The parts of the function definition.
10816* Dec Example altogether:: Putting the function definition together.
10817@end menu
10818
d6adf7e7 10819@node Decrementing Example
8cda6f8f
GM
10820@unnumberedsubsubsec Example with decrementing counter
10821
10822To illustrate a loop with a decrementing counter, we will rewrite the
10823@code{triangle} function so the counter decreases to zero.
10824
10825This is the reverse of the earlier version of the function. In this
10826case, to find out how many pebbles are needed to make a triangle with
108273 rows, add the number of pebbles in the third row, 3, to the number
10828in the preceding row, 2, and then add the total of those two rows to
10829the row that precedes them, which is 1.
10830
10831Likewise, to find the number of pebbles in a triangle with 7 rows, add
10832the number of pebbles in the seventh row, 7, to the number in the
10833preceding row, which is 6, and then add the total of those two rows to
10834the row that precedes them, which is 5, and so on. As in the previous
10835example, each addition only involves adding two numbers, the total of
10836the rows already added up and the number of pebbles in the row that is
10837being added to the total. This process of adding two numbers is
10838repeated again and again until there are no more pebbles to add.
10839
10840We know how many pebbles to start with: the number of pebbles in the
10841last row is equal to the number of rows. If the triangle has seven
10842rows, the number of pebbles in the last row is 7. Likewise, we know how
10843many pebbles are in the preceding row: it is one less than the number in
10844the row.
10845
d6adf7e7 10846@node Dec Example parts
8cda6f8f
GM
10847@unnumberedsubsubsec The parts of the function definition
10848
10849We start with three variables: the total number of rows in the
10850triangle; the number of pebbles in a row; and the total number of
10851pebbles, which is what we want to calculate. These variables can be
10852named @code{number-of-rows}, @code{number-of-pebbles-in-row}, and
10853@code{total}, respectively.
10854
10855Both @code{total} and @code{number-of-pebbles-in-row} are used only
10856inside the function and are declared with @code{let}. The initial
10857value of @code{total} should, of course, be zero. However, the
10858initial value of @code{number-of-pebbles-in-row} should be equal to
10859the number of rows in the triangle, since the addition will start with
10860the longest row.
10861
10862@need 1250
10863This means that the beginning of the @code{let} expression will look
10864like this:
10865
10866@smallexample
10867@group
10868(let ((total 0)
10869 (number-of-pebbles-in-row number-of-rows))
10870 @var{body}@dots{})
10871@end group
10872@end smallexample
10873
10874The total number of pebbles can be found by repeatedly adding the number
10875of pebbles in a row to the total already found, that is, by repeatedly
10876evaluating the following expression:
10877
10878@smallexample
10879(setq total (+ total number-of-pebbles-in-row))
10880@end smallexample
10881
10882@noindent
10883After the @code{number-of-pebbles-in-row} is added to the @code{total},
10884the @code{number-of-pebbles-in-row} should be decremented by one, since
10885the next time the loop repeats, the preceding row will be
10886added to the total.
10887
10888The number of pebbles in a preceding row is one less than the number of
10889pebbles in a row, so the built-in Emacs Lisp function @code{1-} can be
10890used to compute the number of pebbles in the preceding row. This can be
10891done with the following expression:
10892
10893@smallexample
10894@group
10895(setq number-of-pebbles-in-row
10896 (1- number-of-pebbles-in-row))
10897@end group
10898@end smallexample
10899
10900Finally, we know that the @code{while} loop should stop making repeated
10901additions when there are no pebbles in a row. So the test for
10902the @code{while} loop is simply:
10903
10904@smallexample
10905(while (> number-of-pebbles-in-row 0)
10906@end smallexample
10907
d6adf7e7 10908@node Dec Example altogether
8cda6f8f
GM
10909@unnumberedsubsubsec Putting the function definition together
10910
10911We can put these expressions together to create a function definition
10912that works. However, on examination, we find that one of the local
10913variables is unneeded!
10914
10915@need 1250
10916The function definition looks like this:
10917
10918@smallexample
10919@group
10920;;; @r{First subtractive version.}
10921(defun triangle (number-of-rows)
10922 "Add up the number of pebbles in a triangle."
10923 (let ((total 0)
10924 (number-of-pebbles-in-row number-of-rows))
10925 (while (> number-of-pebbles-in-row 0)
10926 (setq total (+ total number-of-pebbles-in-row))
10927 (setq number-of-pebbles-in-row
10928 (1- number-of-pebbles-in-row)))
10929 total))
10930@end group
10931@end smallexample
10932
10933As written, this function works.
10934
10935However, we do not need @code{number-of-pebbles-in-row}.
10936
10937@cindex Argument as local variable
10938When the @code{triangle} function is evaluated, the symbol
10939@code{number-of-rows} will be bound to a number, giving it an initial
10940value. That number can be changed in the body of the function as if
10941it were a local variable, without any fear that such a change will
10942effect the value of the variable outside of the function. This is a
10943very useful characteristic of Lisp; it means that the variable
10944@code{number-of-rows} can be used anywhere in the function where
10945@code{number-of-pebbles-in-row} is used.
10946
10947@need 800
10948Here is a second version of the function written a bit more cleanly:
10949
10950@smallexample
10951@group
10952(defun triangle (number) ; @r{Second version.}
10953 "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive."
10954 (let ((total 0))
10955 (while (> number 0)
10956 (setq total (+ total number))
10957 (setq number (1- number)))
10958 total))
10959@end group
10960@end smallexample
10961
10962In brief, a properly written @code{while} loop will consist of three parts:
10963
10964@enumerate
10965@item
10966A test that will return false after the loop has repeated itself the
10967correct number of times.
10968
10969@item
10970An expression the evaluation of which will return the value desired
10971after being repeatedly evaluated.
10972
10973@item
10974An expression to change the value passed to the true-or-false-test so
10975that the test returns false after the loop has repeated itself the right
10976number of times.
10977@end enumerate
10978
d6adf7e7 10979@node dolist dotimes
8cda6f8f
GM
10980@section Save your time: @code{dolist} and @code{dotimes}
10981
10982In addition to @code{while}, both @code{dolist} and @code{dotimes}
10983provide for looping. Sometimes these are quicker to write than the
10984equivalent @code{while} loop. Both are Lisp macros. (@xref{Macros, ,
10985Macros, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}. )
10986
10987@code{dolist} works like a @code{while} loop that `@sc{cdr}s down a
10988list': @code{dolist} automatically shortens the list each time it
10989loops---takes the @sc{cdr} of the list---and binds the @sc{car} of
10990each shorter version of the list to the first of its arguments.
10991
10992@code{dotimes} loops a specific number of times: you specify the number.
10993
10994@menu
10995* dolist::
10996* dotimes::
10997@end menu
10998
d6adf7e7
GM
10999@node dolist
11000@unnumberedsubsec The @code{dolist} Macro
8cda6f8f
GM
11001@findex dolist
11002
11003Suppose, for example, you want to reverse a list, so that
11004``first'' ``second'' ``third'' becomes ``third'' ``second'' ``first''.
11005
11006@need 1250
11007In practice, you would use the @code{reverse} function, like this:
11008
11009@smallexample
11010@group
11011(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
11012
11013(reverse animals)
11014@end group
11015@end smallexample
11016
11017@need 800
11018@noindent
11019Here is how you could reverse the list using a @code{while} loop:
11020
11021@smallexample
11022@group
11023(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
11024
11025(defun reverse-list-with-while (list)
11026 "Using while, reverse the order of LIST."
11027 (let (value) ; make sure list starts empty
11028 (while list
11029 (setq value (cons (car list) value))
11030 (setq list (cdr list)))
11031 value))
11032
11033(reverse-list-with-while animals)
11034@end group
11035@end smallexample
11036
11037@need 800
11038@noindent
11039And here is how you could use the @code{dolist} macro:
11040
11041@smallexample
11042@group
11043(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
11044
11045(defun reverse-list-with-dolist (list)
11046 "Using dolist, reverse the order of LIST."
11047 (let (value) ; make sure list starts empty
11048 (dolist (element list value)
11049 (setq value (cons element value)))))
11050
11051(reverse-list-with-dolist animals)
11052@end group
11053@end smallexample
11054
11055@need 1250
11056@noindent
11057In Info, you can place your cursor after the closing parenthesis of
11058each expression and type @kbd{C-x C-e}; in each case, you should see
11059
11060@smallexample
11061(tiger lion giraffe gazelle)
11062@end smallexample
11063
11064@noindent
11065in the echo area.
11066
11067For this example, the existing @code{reverse} function is obviously best.
11068The @code{while} loop is just like our first example (@pxref{Loop
11069Example, , A @code{while} Loop and a List}). The @code{while} first
11070checks whether the list has elements; if so, it constructs a new list
11071by adding the first element of the list to the existing list (which in
11072the first iteration of the loop is @code{nil}). Since the second
11073element is prepended in front of the first element, and the third
11074element is prepended in front of the second element, the list is reversed.
11075
11076In the expression using a @code{while} loop,
11077the @w{@code{(setq list (cdr list))}}
11078expression shortens the list, so the @code{while} loop eventually
11079stops. In addition, it provides the @code{cons} expression with a new
11080first element by creating a new and shorter list at each repetition of
11081the loop.
11082
11083The @code{dolist} expression does very much the same as the
11084@code{while} expression, except that the @code{dolist} macro does some
11085of the work you have to do when writing a @code{while} expression.
11086
11087Like a @code{while} loop, a @code{dolist} loops. What is different is
f99f1641
PE
11088that it automatically shortens the list each time it loops---it
11089`@sc{cdr}s down the list' on its own---and it automatically binds
8cda6f8f
GM
11090the @sc{car} of each shorter version of the list to the first of its
11091arguments.
11092
11093In the example, the @sc{car} of each shorter version of the list is
11094referred to using the symbol @samp{element}, the list itself is called
11095@samp{list}, and the value returned is called @samp{value}. The
11096remainder of the @code{dolist} expression is the body.
11097
11098The @code{dolist} expression binds the @sc{car} of each shorter
11099version of the list to @code{element} and then evaluates the body of
11100the expression; and repeats the loop. The result is returned in
11101@code{value}.
11102
d6adf7e7
GM
11103@node dotimes
11104@unnumberedsubsec The @code{dotimes} Macro
8cda6f8f
GM
11105@findex dotimes
11106
11107The @code{dotimes} macro is similar to @code{dolist}, except that it
11108loops a specific number of times.
11109
11110The first argument to @code{dotimes} is assigned the numbers 0, 1, 2
11111and so forth each time around the loop, and the value of the third
11112argument is returned. You need to provide the value of the second
11113argument, which is how many times the macro loops.
11114
11115@need 1250
11116For example, the following binds the numbers from 0 up to, but not
11117including, the number 3 to the first argument, @var{number}, and then
11118constructs a list of the three numbers. (The first number is 0, the
11119second number is 1, and the third number is 2; this makes a total of
11120three numbers in all, starting with zero as the first number.)
11121
11122@smallexample
11123@group
11124(let (value) ; otherwise a value is a void variable
11125 (dotimes (number 3 value)
11126 (setq value (cons number value))))
11127
11128@result{} (2 1 0)
11129@end group
11130@end smallexample
11131
11132@noindent
11133@code{dotimes} returns @code{value}, so the way to use
11134@code{dotimes} is to operate on some expression @var{number} number of
11135times and then return the result, either as a list or an atom.
11136
11137@need 1250
11138Here is an example of a @code{defun} that uses @code{dotimes} to add
11139up the number of pebbles in a triangle.
11140
11141@smallexample
11142@group
11143(defun triangle-using-dotimes (number-of-rows)
11144 "Using dotimes, add up the number of pebbles in a triangle."
11145(let ((total 0)) ; otherwise a total is a void variable
11146 (dotimes (number number-of-rows total)
11147 (setq total (+ total (1+ number))))))
11148
11149(triangle-using-dotimes 4)
11150@end group
11151@end smallexample
11152
d6adf7e7 11153@node Recursion
8cda6f8f
GM
11154@section Recursion
11155@cindex Recursion
11156
11157A recursive function contains code that tells the Lisp interpreter to
11158call a program that runs exactly like itself, but with slightly
11159different arguments. The code runs exactly the same because it has
11160the same name. However, even though the program has the same name, it
11161is not the same entity. It is different. In the jargon, it is a
11162different `instance'.
11163
11164Eventually, if the program is written correctly, the `slightly
11165different arguments' will become sufficiently different from the first
11166arguments that the final instance will stop.
11167
11168@menu
11169* Building Robots:: Same model, different serial number ...
11170* Recursive Definition Parts:: Walk until you stop ...
11171* Recursion with list:: Using a list as the test whether to recurse.
11172* Recursive triangle function::
11173* Recursion with cond::
11174* Recursive Patterns:: Often used templates.
11175* No Deferment:: Don't store up work ...
11176* No deferment solution::
11177@end menu
11178
d6adf7e7 11179@node Building Robots
8cda6f8f
GM
11180@subsection Building Robots: Extending the Metaphor
11181@cindex Building robots
11182@cindex Robots, building
11183
11184It is sometimes helpful to think of a running program as a robot that
11185does a job. In doing its job, a recursive function calls on a second
11186robot to help it. The second robot is identical to the first in every
11187way, except that the second robot helps the first and has been
11188passed different arguments than the first.
11189
11190In a recursive function, the second robot may call a third; and the
11191third may call a fourth, and so on. Each of these is a different
11192entity; but all are clones.
11193
11194Since each robot has slightly different instructions---the arguments
11195will differ from one robot to the next---the last robot should know
11196when to stop.
11197
11198Let's expand on the metaphor in which a computer program is a robot.
11199
11200A function definition provides the blueprints for a robot. When you
11201install a function definition, that is, when you evaluate a
767b8eae
XF
11202@code{defun} macro, you install the necessary equipment to build
11203robots. It is as if you were in a factory, setting up an assembly
11204line. Robots with the same name are built according to the same
11205blueprints. So they have, as it were, the same `model number', but a
11206different `serial number'.
8cda6f8f
GM
11207
11208We often say that a recursive function `calls itself'. What we mean
11209is that the instructions in a recursive function cause the Lisp
11210interpreter to run a different function that has the same name and
11211does the same job as the first, but with different arguments.
11212
11213It is important that the arguments differ from one instance to the
11214next; otherwise, the process will never stop.
11215
d6adf7e7 11216@node Recursive Definition Parts
8cda6f8f
GM
11217@subsection The Parts of a Recursive Definition
11218@cindex Parts of a Recursive Definition
11219@cindex Recursive Definition Parts
11220
11221A recursive function typically contains a conditional expression which
11222has three parts:
11223
11224@enumerate
11225@item
11226A true-or-false-test that determines whether the function is called
11227again, here called the @dfn{do-again-test}.
11228
11229@item
11230The name of the function. When this name is called, a new instance of
11231the function---a new robot, as it were---is created and told what to do.
11232
11233@item
11234An expression that returns a different value each time the function is
11235called, here called the @dfn{next-step-expression}. Consequently, the
11236argument (or arguments) passed to the new instance of the function
11237will be different from that passed to the previous instance. This
11238causes the conditional expression, the @dfn{do-again-test}, to test
11239false after the correct number of repetitions.
11240@end enumerate
11241
11242Recursive functions can be much simpler than any other kind of
11243function. Indeed, when people first start to use them, they often look
11244so mysteriously simple as to be incomprehensible. Like riding a
11245bicycle, reading a recursive function definition takes a certain knack
11246which is hard at first but then seems simple.
11247
11248@need 1200
11249There are several different common recursive patterns. A very simple
11250pattern looks like this:
11251
11252@smallexample
11253@group
11254(defun @var{name-of-recursive-function} (@var{argument-list})
11255 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
11256 (if @var{do-again-test}
11257 @var{body}@dots{}
11258 (@var{name-of-recursive-function}
11259 @var{next-step-expression})))
11260@end group
11261@end smallexample
11262
11263Each time a recursive function is evaluated, a new instance of it is
11264created and told what to do. The arguments tell the instance what to do.
11265
11266An argument is bound to the value of the next-step-expression. Each
11267instance runs with a different value of the next-step-expression.
11268
11269The value in the next-step-expression is used in the do-again-test.
11270
11271The value returned by the next-step-expression is passed to the new
11272instance of the function, which evaluates it (or some
11273transmogrification of it) to determine whether to continue or stop.
11274The next-step-expression is designed so that the do-again-test returns
11275false when the function should no longer be repeated.
11276
11277The do-again-test is sometimes called the @dfn{stop condition},
11278since it stops the repetitions when it tests false.
11279
d6adf7e7 11280@node Recursion with list
8cda6f8f
GM
11281@subsection Recursion with a List
11282
11283The example of a @code{while} loop that printed the elements of a list
11284of numbers can be written recursively. Here is the code, including
11285an expression to set the value of the variable @code{animals} to a list.
11286
8f4ea8e0
GM
11287If you are reading this in Info in Emacs, you can evaluate this
11288expression directly in Info. Otherwise, you must copy the example
11289to the @file{*scratch*} buffer and evaluate each expression there.
11290Use @kbd{C-u C-x C-e} to evaluate the
8cda6f8f
GM
11291@code{(print-elements-recursively animals)} expression so that the
11292results are printed in the buffer; otherwise the Lisp interpreter will
11293try to squeeze the results into the one line of the echo area.
11294
11295Also, place your cursor immediately after the last closing parenthesis
11296of the @code{print-elements-recursively} function, before the comment.
11297Otherwise, the Lisp interpreter will try to evaluate the comment.
11298
8cda6f8f
GM
11299@findex print-elements-recursively
11300@smallexample
11301@group
11302(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
11303
11304(defun print-elements-recursively (list)
11305 "Print each element of LIST on a line of its own.
11306Uses recursion."
11307 (when list ; @r{do-again-test}
11308 (print (car list)) ; @r{body}
11309 (print-elements-recursively ; @r{recursive call}
11310 (cdr list)))) ; @r{next-step-expression}
11311
11312(print-elements-recursively animals)
11313@end group
11314@end smallexample
11315
11316The @code{print-elements-recursively} function first tests whether
11317there is any content in the list; if there is, the function prints the
11318first element of the list, the @sc{car} of the list. Then the
11319function `invokes itself', but gives itself as its argument, not the
11320whole list, but the second and subsequent elements of the list, the
11321@sc{cdr} of the list.
11322
11323Put another way, if the list is not empty, the function invokes
11324another instance of code that is similar to the initial code, but is a
11325different thread of execution, with different arguments than the first
11326instance.
11327
11328Put in yet another way, if the list is not empty, the first robot
2d7752a0 11329assembles a second robot and tells it what to do; the second robot is
8cda6f8f
GM
11330a different individual from the first, but is the same model.
11331
11332When the second evaluation occurs, the @code{when} expression is
11333evaluated and if true, prints the first element of the list it
11334receives as its argument (which is the second element of the original
11335list). Then the function `calls itself' with the @sc{cdr} of the list
11336it is invoked with, which (the second time around) is the @sc{cdr} of
11337the @sc{cdr} of the original list.
11338
11339Note that although we say that the function `calls itself', what we
11340mean is that the Lisp interpreter assembles and instructs a new
11341instance of the program. The new instance is a clone of the first,
11342but is a separate individual.
11343
11344Each time the function `invokes itself', it invokes itself on a
11345shorter version of the original list. It creates a new instance that
11346works on a shorter list.
11347
11348Eventually, the function invokes itself on an empty list. It creates
11349a new instance whose argument is @code{nil}. The conditional expression
11350tests the value of @code{list}. Since the value of @code{list} is
11351@code{nil}, the @code{when} expression tests false so the then-part is
11352not evaluated. The function as a whole then returns @code{nil}.
11353
11354@need 1200
a9097c6d
KB
11355When you evaluate the expression @code{(print-elements-recursively
11356animals)} in the @file{*scratch*} buffer, you see this result:
8cda6f8f
GM
11357
11358@smallexample
11359@group
11360gazelle
11361
11362giraffe
11363
11364lion
11365
11366tiger
11367nil
11368@end group
11369@end smallexample
11370
11371@need 2000
d6adf7e7 11372@node Recursive triangle function
8cda6f8f
GM
11373@subsection Recursion in Place of a Counter
11374@findex triangle-recursively
11375
11376@need 1200
11377The @code{triangle} function described in a previous section can also
11378be written recursively. It looks like this:
11379
11380@smallexample
11381@group
11382(defun triangle-recursively (number)
11383 "Return the sum of the numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
11384Uses recursion."
11385 (if (= number 1) ; @r{do-again-test}
11386 1 ; @r{then-part}
11387 (+ number ; @r{else-part}
11388 (triangle-recursively ; @r{recursive call}
11389 (1- number))))) ; @r{next-step-expression}
11390
11391(triangle-recursively 7)
11392@end group
11393@end smallexample
11394
11395@noindent
11396You can install this function by evaluating it and then try it by
11397evaluating @code{(triangle-recursively 7)}. (Remember to put your
11398cursor immediately after the last parenthesis of the function
11399definition, before the comment.) The function evaluates to 28.
11400
11401To understand how this function works, let's consider what happens in the
11402various cases when the function is passed 1, 2, 3, or 4 as the value of
11403its argument.
11404
11405@menu
11406* Recursive Example arg of 1 or 2::
11407* Recursive Example arg of 3 or 4::
11408@end menu
11409
8cda6f8f 11410@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 11411@node Recursive Example arg of 1 or 2
8cda6f8f
GM
11412@unnumberedsubsubsec An argument of 1 or 2
11413@end ifnottex
11414
11415First, what happens if the value of the argument is 1?
11416
11417The function has an @code{if} expression after the documentation
11418string. It tests whether the value of @code{number} is equal to 1; if
11419so, Emacs evaluates the then-part of the @code{if} expression, which
11420returns the number 1 as the value of the function. (A triangle with
11421one row has one pebble in it.)
11422
11423Suppose, however, that the value of the argument is 2. In this case,
11424Emacs evaluates the else-part of the @code{if} expression.
11425
11426@need 1200
11427The else-part consists of an addition, the recursive call to
11428@code{triangle-recursively} and a decrementing action; and it looks like
11429this:
11430
11431@smallexample
11432(+ number (triangle-recursively (1- number)))
11433@end smallexample
11434
11435When Emacs evaluates this expression, the innermost expression is
11436evaluated first; then the other parts in sequence. Here are the steps
11437in detail:
11438
11439@table @i
11440@item Step 1 @w{ } Evaluate the innermost expression.
11441
11442The innermost expression is @code{(1- number)} so Emacs decrements the
11443value of @code{number} from 2 to 1.
11444
11445@item Step 2 @w{ } Evaluate the @code{triangle-recursively} function.
11446
11447The Lisp interpreter creates an individual instance of
11448@code{triangle-recursively}. It does not matter that this function is
11449contained within itself. Emacs passes the result Step 1 as the
11450argument used by this instance of the @code{triangle-recursively}
11451function
11452
11453In this case, Emacs evaluates @code{triangle-recursively} with an
11454argument of 1. This means that this evaluation of
11455@code{triangle-recursively} returns 1.
11456
11457@item Step 3 @w{ } Evaluate the value of @code{number}.
11458
11459The variable @code{number} is the second element of the list that
11460starts with @code{+}; its value is 2.
11461
11462@item Step 4 @w{ } Evaluate the @code{+} expression.
11463
11464The @code{+} expression receives two arguments, the first
11465from the evaluation of @code{number} (Step 3) and the second from the
11466evaluation of @code{triangle-recursively} (Step 2).
11467
11468The result of the addition is the sum of 2 plus 1, and the number 3 is
11469returned, which is correct. A triangle with two rows has three
11470pebbles in it.
11471@end table
11472
d6adf7e7 11473@node Recursive Example arg of 3 or 4
8cda6f8f
GM
11474@unnumberedsubsubsec An argument of 3 or 4
11475
11476Suppose that @code{triangle-recursively} is called with an argument of
114773.
11478
11479@table @i
11480@item Step 1 @w{ } Evaluate the do-again-test.
11481
11482The @code{if} expression is evaluated first. This is the do-again
11483test and returns false, so the else-part of the @code{if} expression
11484is evaluated. (Note that in this example, the do-again-test causes
11485the function to call itself when it tests false, not when it tests
11486true.)
11487
11488@item Step 2 @w{ } Evaluate the innermost expression of the else-part.
11489
11490The innermost expression of the else-part is evaluated, which decrements
114913 to 2. This is the next-step-expression.
11492
11493@item Step 3 @w{ } Evaluate the @code{triangle-recursively} function.
11494
11495The number 2 is passed to the @code{triangle-recursively} function.
11496
a9097c6d 11497We already know what happens when Emacs evaluates @code{triangle-recursively} with
8cda6f8f
GM
11498an argument of 2. After going through the sequence of actions described
11499earlier, it returns a value of 3. So that is what will happen here.
11500
11501@item Step 4 @w{ } Evaluate the addition.
11502
115033 will be passed as an argument to the addition and will be added to the
11504number with which the function was called, which is 3.
11505@end table
11506
11507@noindent
11508The value returned by the function as a whole will be 6.
11509
11510Now that we know what will happen when @code{triangle-recursively} is
11511called with an argument of 3, it is evident what will happen if it is
11512called with an argument of 4:
11513
11514@quotation
11515@need 800
11516In the recursive call, the evaluation of
11517
11518@smallexample
11519(triangle-recursively (1- 4))
11520@end smallexample
11521
11522@need 800
11523@noindent
11524will return the value of evaluating
11525
11526@smallexample
11527(triangle-recursively 3)
11528@end smallexample
11529
11530@noindent
11531which is 6 and this value will be added to 4 by the addition in the
11532third line.
11533@end quotation
11534
11535@noindent
11536The value returned by the function as a whole will be 10.
11537
11538Each time @code{triangle-recursively} is evaluated, it evaluates a
11539version of itself---a different instance of itself---with a smaller
11540argument, until the argument is small enough so that it does not
11541evaluate itself.
11542
11543Note that this particular design for a recursive function
11544requires that operations be deferred.
11545
11546Before @code{(triangle-recursively 7)} can calculate its answer, it
11547must call @code{(triangle-recursively 6)}; and before
11548@code{(triangle-recursively 6)} can calculate its answer, it must call
11549@code{(triangle-recursively 5)}; and so on. That is to say, the
11550calculation that @code{(triangle-recursively 7)} makes must be
11551deferred until @code{(triangle-recursively 6)} makes its calculation;
11552and @code{(triangle-recursively 6)} must defer until
11553@code{(triangle-recursively 5)} completes; and so on.
11554
11555If each of these instances of @code{triangle-recursively} are thought
11556of as different robots, the first robot must wait for the second to
11557complete its job, which must wait until the third completes, and so
11558on.
11559
11560There is a way around this kind of waiting, which we will discuss in
11561@ref{No Deferment, , Recursion without Deferments}.
11562
d6adf7e7 11563@node Recursion with cond
8cda6f8f
GM
11564@subsection Recursion Example Using @code{cond}
11565@findex cond
11566
11567The version of @code{triangle-recursively} described earlier is written
11568with the @code{if} special form. It can also be written using another
11569special form called @code{cond}. The name of the special form
11570@code{cond} is an abbreviation of the word @samp{conditional}.
11571
11572Although the @code{cond} special form is not used as often in the
11573Emacs Lisp sources as @code{if}, it is used often enough to justify
11574explaining it.
11575
11576@need 800
11577The template for a @code{cond} expression looks like this:
11578
11579@smallexample
11580@group
11581(cond
11582 @var{body}@dots{})
11583@end group
11584@end smallexample
11585
11586@noindent
11587where the @var{body} is a series of lists.
11588
11589@need 800
11590Written out more fully, the template looks like this:
11591
11592@smallexample
11593@group
11594(cond
11595 (@var{first-true-or-false-test} @var{first-consequent})
11596 (@var{second-true-or-false-test} @var{second-consequent})
11597 (@var{third-true-or-false-test} @var{third-consequent})
11598 @dots{})
11599@end group
11600@end smallexample
11601
11602When the Lisp interpreter evaluates the @code{cond} expression, it
11603evaluates the first element (the @sc{car} or true-or-false-test) of
11604the first expression in a series of expressions within the body of the
11605@code{cond}.
11606
11607If the true-or-false-test returns @code{nil} the rest of that
11608expression, the consequent, is skipped and the true-or-false-test of the
11609next expression is evaluated. When an expression is found whose
11610true-or-false-test returns a value that is not @code{nil}, the
11611consequent of that expression is evaluated. The consequent can be one
11612or more expressions. If the consequent consists of more than one
11613expression, the expressions are evaluated in sequence and the value of
11614the last one is returned. If the expression does not have a consequent,
11615the value of the true-or-false-test is returned.
11616
11617If none of the true-or-false-tests test true, the @code{cond} expression
11618returns @code{nil}.
11619
11620@need 1250
11621Written using @code{cond}, the @code{triangle} function looks like this:
11622
11623@smallexample
11624@group
11625(defun triangle-using-cond (number)
11626 (cond ((<= number 0) 0)
11627 ((= number 1) 1)
11628 ((> number 1)
11629 (+ number (triangle-using-cond (1- number))))))
11630@end group
11631@end smallexample
11632
11633@noindent
11634In this example, the @code{cond} returns 0 if the number is less than or
11635equal to 0, it returns 1 if the number is 1 and it evaluates @code{(+
11636number (triangle-using-cond (1- number)))} if the number is greater than
116371.
11638
d6adf7e7 11639@node Recursive Patterns
8cda6f8f
GM
11640@subsection Recursive Patterns
11641@cindex Recursive Patterns
11642
11643Here are three common recursive patterns. Each involves a list.
11644Recursion does not need to involve lists, but Lisp is designed for lists
11645and this provides a sense of its primal capabilities.
11646
11647@menu
11648* Every::
11649* Accumulate::
11650* Keep::
11651@end menu
11652
d6adf7e7 11653@node Every
8cda6f8f
GM
11654@unnumberedsubsubsec Recursive Pattern: @emph{every}
11655@cindex Every, type of recursive pattern
11656@cindex Recursive pattern: every
11657
11658In the @code{every} recursive pattern, an action is performed on every
11659element of a list.
11660
11661@need 1500
11662The basic pattern is:
11663
11664@itemize @bullet
11665@item
11666If a list be empty, return @code{nil}.
11667@item
11668Else, act on the beginning of the list (the @sc{car} of the list)
11669 @itemize @minus
11670 @item
11671 through a recursive call by the function on the rest (the
11672 @sc{cdr}) of the list,
11673 @item
11674 and, optionally, combine the acted-on element, using @code{cons},
11675 with the results of acting on the rest.
11676 @end itemize
11677@end itemize
11678
11679@need 1500
11680Here is example:
11681
11682@smallexample
11683@group
11684(defun square-each (numbers-list)
11685 "Square each of a NUMBERS LIST, recursively."
11686 (if (not numbers-list) ; do-again-test
11687 nil
11688 (cons
11689 (* (car numbers-list) (car numbers-list))
11690 (square-each (cdr numbers-list))))) ; next-step-expression
11691@end group
11692
11693@group
11694(square-each '(1 2 3))
11695 @result{} (1 4 9)
11696@end group
11697@end smallexample
11698
11699@need 1200
11700@noindent
11701If @code{numbers-list} is empty, do nothing. But if it has content,
11702construct a list combining the square of the first number in the list
11703with the result of the recursive call.
11704
11705(The example follows the pattern exactly: @code{nil} is returned if
11706the numbers' list is empty. In practice, you would write the
11707conditional so it carries out the action when the numbers' list is not
11708empty.)
11709
11710The @code{print-elements-recursively} function (@pxref{Recursion with
11711list, , Recursion with a List}) is another example of an @code{every}
11712pattern, except in this case, rather than bring the results together
11713using @code{cons}, we print each element of output.
11714
11715@need 1250
11716The @code{print-elements-recursively} function looks like this:
11717
11718@smallexample
11719@group
11720(setq animals '(gazelle giraffe lion tiger))
11721@end group
11722
11723@group
11724(defun print-elements-recursively (list)
11725 "Print each element of LIST on a line of its own.
11726Uses recursion."
11727 (when list ; @r{do-again-test}
11728 (print (car list)) ; @r{body}
11729 (print-elements-recursively ; @r{recursive call}
11730 (cdr list)))) ; @r{next-step-expression}
11731
11732(print-elements-recursively animals)
11733@end group
11734@end smallexample
11735
11736@need 1500
11737The pattern for @code{print-elements-recursively} is:
11738
11739@itemize @bullet
11740@item
11741When the list is empty, do nothing.
11742@item
11743But when the list has at least one element,
11744 @itemize @minus
11745 @item
11746 act on the beginning of the list (the @sc{car} of the list),
11747 @item
11748 and make a recursive call on the rest (the @sc{cdr}) of the list.
11749 @end itemize
11750@end itemize
11751
d6adf7e7 11752@node Accumulate
8cda6f8f
GM
11753@unnumberedsubsubsec Recursive Pattern: @emph{accumulate}
11754@cindex Accumulate, type of recursive pattern
11755@cindex Recursive pattern: accumulate
11756
11757Another recursive pattern is called the @code{accumulate} pattern. In
11758the @code{accumulate} recursive pattern, an action is performed on
11759every element of a list and the result of that action is accumulated
11760with the results of performing the action on the other elements.
11761
11762This is very like the `every' pattern using @code{cons}, except that
11763@code{cons} is not used, but some other combiner.
11764
11765@need 1500
11766The pattern is:
11767
11768@itemize @bullet
11769@item
11770If a list be empty, return zero or some other constant.
11771@item
11772Else, act on the beginning of the list (the @sc{car} of the list),
11773 @itemize @minus
11774 @item
11775 and combine that acted-on element, using @code{+} or
11776 some other combining function, with
11777 @item
11778 a recursive call by the function on the rest (the @sc{cdr}) of the list.
11779 @end itemize
11780@end itemize
11781
11782@need 1500
11783Here is an example:
11784
11785@smallexample
11786@group
11787(defun add-elements (numbers-list)
11788 "Add the elements of NUMBERS-LIST together."
11789 (if (not numbers-list)
11790 0
11791 (+ (car numbers-list) (add-elements (cdr numbers-list)))))
11792@end group
11793
11794@group
11795(add-elements '(1 2 3 4))
11796 @result{} 10
11797@end group
11798@end smallexample
11799
11800@xref{Files List, , Making a List of Files}, for an example of the
11801accumulate pattern.
11802
d6adf7e7 11803@node Keep
8cda6f8f
GM
11804@unnumberedsubsubsec Recursive Pattern: @emph{keep}
11805@cindex Keep, type of recursive pattern
11806@cindex Recursive pattern: keep
11807
11808A third recursive pattern is called the @code{keep} pattern.
11809In the @code{keep} recursive pattern, each element of a list is tested;
11810the element is acted on and the results are kept only if the element
11811meets a criterion.
11812
11813Again, this is very like the `every' pattern, except the element is
11814skipped unless it meets a criterion.
11815
11816@need 1500
11817The pattern has three parts:
11818
11819@itemize @bullet
11820@item
11821If a list be empty, return @code{nil}.
11822@item
11823Else, if the beginning of the list (the @sc{car} of the list) passes
11824 a test
11825 @itemize @minus
11826 @item
11827 act on that element and combine it, using @code{cons} with
11828 @item
11829 a recursive call by the function on the rest (the @sc{cdr}) of the list.
11830 @end itemize
11831@item
11832Otherwise, if the beginning of the list (the @sc{car} of the list) fails
11833the test
11834 @itemize @minus
11835 @item
11836 skip on that element,
11837 @item
11838 and, recursively call the function on the rest (the @sc{cdr}) of the list.
11839 @end itemize
11840@end itemize
11841
11842@need 1500
11843Here is an example that uses @code{cond}:
11844
11845@smallexample
11846@group
11847(defun keep-three-letter-words (word-list)
11848 "Keep three letter words in WORD-LIST."
11849 (cond
11850 ;; First do-again-test: stop-condition
11851 ((not word-list) nil)
11852
11853 ;; Second do-again-test: when to act
11854 ((eq 3 (length (symbol-name (car word-list))))
11855 ;; combine acted-on element with recursive call on shorter list
11856 (cons (car word-list) (keep-three-letter-words (cdr word-list))))
11857
11858 ;; Third do-again-test: when to skip element;
11859 ;; recursively call shorter list with next-step expression
11860 (t (keep-three-letter-words (cdr word-list)))))
11861@end group
11862
11863@group
11864(keep-three-letter-words '(one two three four five six))
11865 @result{} (one two six)
11866@end group
11867@end smallexample
11868
11869It goes without saying that you need not use @code{nil} as the test for
11870when to stop; and you can, of course, combine these patterns.
11871
d6adf7e7 11872@node No Deferment
8cda6f8f
GM
11873@subsection Recursion without Deferments
11874@cindex Deferment in recursion
11875@cindex Recursion without Deferments
11876
11877Let's consider again what happens with the @code{triangle-recursively}
11878function. We will find that the intermediate calculations are
11879deferred until all can be done.
11880
11881@need 800
11882Here is the function definition:
11883
11884@smallexample
11885@group
11886(defun triangle-recursively (number)
11887 "Return the sum of the numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
11888Uses recursion."
11889 (if (= number 1) ; @r{do-again-test}
11890 1 ; @r{then-part}
11891 (+ number ; @r{else-part}
11892 (triangle-recursively ; @r{recursive call}
11893 (1- number))))) ; @r{next-step-expression}
11894@end group
11895@end smallexample
11896
11897What happens when we call this function with a argument of 7?
11898
11899The first instance of the @code{triangle-recursively} function adds
11900the number 7 to the value returned by a second instance of
11901@code{triangle-recursively}, an instance that has been passed an
11902argument of 6. That is to say, the first calculation is:
11903
11904@smallexample
11905(+ 7 (triangle-recursively 6))
11906@end smallexample
11907
11908@noindent
11909The first instance of @code{triangle-recursively}---you may want to
11910think of it as a little robot---cannot complete its job. It must hand
11911off the calculation for @code{(triangle-recursively 6)} to a second
11912instance of the program, to a second robot. This second individual is
11913completely different from the first one; it is, in the jargon, a
11914`different instantiation'. Or, put another way, it is a different
11915robot. It is the same model as the first; it calculates triangle
11916numbers recursively; but it has a different serial number.
11917
11918And what does @code{(triangle-recursively 6)} return? It returns the
11919number 6 added to the value returned by evaluating
11920@code{triangle-recursively} with an argument of 5. Using the robot
11921metaphor, it asks yet another robot to help it.
11922
11923@need 800
11924Now the total is:
11925
11926@smallexample
11927(+ 7 6 (triangle-recursively 5))
11928@end smallexample
11929
11930@need 800
11931And what happens next?
11932
11933@smallexample
11934(+ 7 6 5 (triangle-recursively 4))
11935@end smallexample
11936
11937Each time @code{triangle-recursively} is called, except for the last
11938time, it creates another instance of the program---another robot---and
11939asks it to make a calculation.
11940
11941@need 800
11942Eventually, the full addition is set up and performed:
11943
11944@smallexample
11945(+ 7 6 5 4 3 2 1)
11946@end smallexample
11947
11948This design for the function defers the calculation of the first step
11949until the second can be done, and defers that until the third can be
11950done, and so on. Each deferment means the computer must remember what
11951is being waited on. This is not a problem when there are only a few
11952steps, as in this example. But it can be a problem when there are
11953more steps.
11954
d6adf7e7 11955@node No deferment solution
8cda6f8f
GM
11956@subsection No Deferment Solution
11957@cindex No deferment solution
11958@cindex Defermentless solution
11959@cindex Solution without deferment
11960
11961The solution to the problem of deferred operations is to write in a
11962manner that does not defer operations@footnote{The phrase @dfn{tail
11963recursive} is used to describe such a process, one that uses
11964`constant space'.}. This requires
11965writing to a different pattern, often one that involves writing two
11966function definitions, an `initialization' function and a `helper'
11967function.
11968
11969The `initialization' function sets up the job; the `helper' function
11970does the work.
11971
11972@need 1200
11973Here are the two function definitions for adding up numbers. They are
11974so simple, I find them hard to understand.
11975
11976@smallexample
11977@group
11978(defun triangle-initialization (number)
11979 "Return the sum of the numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
11980This is the `initialization' component of a two function
11981duo that uses recursion."
11982 (triangle-recursive-helper 0 0 number))
11983@end group
11984@end smallexample
11985
11986@smallexample
11987@group
11988(defun triangle-recursive-helper (sum counter number)
11989 "Return SUM, using COUNTER, through NUMBER inclusive.
11990This is the `helper' component of a two function duo
11991that uses recursion."
11992 (if (> counter number)
11993 sum
11994 (triangle-recursive-helper (+ sum counter) ; @r{sum}
11995 (1+ counter) ; @r{counter}
11996 number))) ; @r{number}
11997@end group
11998@end smallexample
11999
12000@need 1250
12001Install both function definitions by evaluating them, then call
12002@code{triangle-initialization} with 2 rows:
12003
12004@smallexample
12005@group
12006(triangle-initialization 2)
12007 @result{} 3
12008@end group
12009@end smallexample
12010
12011The `initialization' function calls the first instance of the `helper'
12012function with three arguments: zero, zero, and a number which is the
12013number of rows in the triangle.
12014
12015The first two arguments passed to the `helper' function are
12016initialization values. These values are changed when
12017@code{triangle-recursive-helper} invokes new instances.@footnote{The
12018jargon is mildly confusing: @code{triangle-recursive-helper} uses a
12019process that is iterative in a procedure that is recursive. The
12020process is called iterative because the computer need only record the
12021three values, @code{sum}, @code{counter}, and @code{number}; the
12022procedure is recursive because the function `calls itself'. On the
12023other hand, both the process and the procedure used by
12024@code{triangle-recursively} are called recursive. The word
12025`recursive' has different meanings in the two contexts.}
12026
12027Let's see what happens when we have a triangle that has one row. (This
12028triangle will have one pebble in it!)
12029
12030@need 1200
12031@code{triangle-initialization} will call its helper with
12032the arguments @w{@code{0 0 1}}. That function will run the conditional
12033test whether @code{(> counter number)}:
12034
12035@smallexample
12036(> 0 1)
12037@end smallexample
12038
12039@need 1200
12040@noindent
12041and find that the result is false, so it will invoke
12042the else-part of the @code{if} clause:
12043
12044@smallexample
12045@group
12046 (triangle-recursive-helper
12047 (+ sum counter) ; @r{sum plus counter} @result{} @r{sum}
12048 (1+ counter) ; @r{increment counter} @result{} @r{counter}
12049 number) ; @r{number stays the same}
12050@end group
12051@end smallexample
12052
12053@need 800
12054@noindent
12055which will first compute:
12056
12057@smallexample
12058@group
12059(triangle-recursive-helper (+ 0 0) ; @r{sum}
12060 (1+ 0) ; @r{counter}
12061 1) ; @r{number}
12062@exdent which is:
12063
12064(triangle-recursive-helper 0 1 1)
12065@end group
12066@end smallexample
12067
12068Again, @code{(> counter number)} will be false, so again, the Lisp
12069interpreter will evaluate @code{triangle-recursive-helper}, creating a
12070new instance with new arguments.
12071
12072@need 800
12073This new instance will be;
12074
12075@smallexample
12076@group
12077 (triangle-recursive-helper
12078 (+ sum counter) ; @r{sum plus counter} @result{} @r{sum}
12079 (1+ counter) ; @r{increment counter} @result{} @r{counter}
12080 number) ; @r{number stays the same}
12081
12082@exdent which is:
12083
12084(triangle-recursive-helper 1 2 1)
12085@end group
12086@end smallexample
12087
12088In this case, the @code{(> counter number)} test will be true! So the
12089instance will return the value of the sum, which will be 1, as
12090expected.
12091
12092Now, let's pass @code{triangle-initialization} an argument
12093of 2, to find out how many pebbles there are in a triangle with two rows.
12094
12095That function calls @code{(triangle-recursive-helper 0 0 2)}.
12096
12097@need 800
12098In stages, the instances called will be:
12099
12100@smallexample
12101@group
12102 @r{sum counter number}
12103(triangle-recursive-helper 0 1 2)
12104
12105(triangle-recursive-helper 1 2 2)
12106
12107(triangle-recursive-helper 3 3 2)
12108@end group
12109@end smallexample
12110
12111When the last instance is called, the @code{(> counter number)} test
12112will be true, so the instance will return the value of @code{sum},
12113which will be 3.
12114
12115This kind of pattern helps when you are writing functions that can use
12116many resources in a computer.
12117
12118@need 1500
d6adf7e7 12119@node Looping exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
12120@section Looping Exercise
12121
12122@itemize @bullet
12123@item
12124Write a function similar to @code{triangle} in which each row has a
12125value which is the square of the row number. Use a @code{while} loop.
12126
12127@item
12128Write a function similar to @code{triangle} that multiplies instead of
12129adds the values.
12130
12131@item
12132Rewrite these two functions recursively. Rewrite these functions
12133using @code{cond}.
12134
12135@c comma in printed title causes problem in Info cross reference
12136@item
12137Write a function for Texinfo mode that creates an index entry at the
12138beginning of a paragraph for every @samp{@@dfn} within the paragraph.
12139(In a Texinfo file, @samp{@@dfn} marks a definition. This book is
12140written in Texinfo.)
12141
12142Many of the functions you will need are described in two of the
12143previous chapters, @ref{Cutting & Storing Text, , Cutting and Storing
12144Text}, and @ref{Yanking, , Yanking Text Back}. If you use
12145@code{forward-paragraph} to put the index entry at the beginning of
12146the paragraph, you will have to use @w{@kbd{C-h f}}
12147(@code{describe-function}) to find out how to make the command go
12148backwards.
12149
12150For more information, see
12151@ifinfo
12152@ref{Indicating, , Indicating Definitions, texinfo}.
12153@end ifinfo
12154@ifhtml
12155@ref{Indicating, , Indicating, texinfo, Texinfo Manual}, which goes to
12156a Texinfo manual in the current directory. Or, if you are on the
12157Internet, see
12158@uref{http://www.gnu.org/software/texinfo/manual/texinfo/}
12159@end ifhtml
12160@iftex
12161``Indicating Definitions, Commands, etc.'' in @cite{Texinfo, The GNU
12162Documentation Format}.
12163@end iftex
12164@end itemize
12165
d6adf7e7 12166@node Regexp Search
8cda6f8f
GM
12167@chapter Regular Expression Searches
12168@cindex Searches, illustrating
12169@cindex Regular expression searches
12170@cindex Patterns, searching for
12171@cindex Motion by sentence and paragraph
12172@cindex Sentences, movement by
12173@cindex Paragraphs, movement by
12174
12175Regular expression searches are used extensively in GNU Emacs. The
12176two functions, @code{forward-sentence} and @code{forward-paragraph},
12177illustrate these searches well. They use regular expressions to find
12178where to move point. The phrase `regular expression' is often written
12179as `regexp'.
12180
12181Regular expression searches are described in @ref{Regexp Search, ,
12182Regular Expression Search, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, as well as in
12183@ref{Regular Expressions, , , elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
12184Manual}. In writing this chapter, I am presuming that you have at
12185least a mild acquaintance with them. The major point to remember is
12186that regular expressions permit you to search for patterns as well as
12187for literal strings of characters. For example, the code in
12188@code{forward-sentence} searches for the pattern of possible
12189characters that could mark the end of a sentence, and moves point to
12190that spot.
12191
12192Before looking at the code for the @code{forward-sentence} function, it
12193is worth considering what the pattern that marks the end of a sentence
12194must be. The pattern is discussed in the next section; following that
12195is a description of the regular expression search function,
12196@code{re-search-forward}. The @code{forward-sentence} function
12197is described in the section following. Finally, the
12198@code{forward-paragraph} function is described in the last section of
12199this chapter. @code{forward-paragraph} is a complex function that
12200introduces several new features.
12201
12202@menu
12203* sentence-end:: The regular expression for @code{sentence-end}.
12204* re-search-forward:: Very similar to @code{search-forward}.
12205* forward-sentence:: A straightforward example of regexp search.
12206* forward-paragraph:: A somewhat complex example.
12207* etags:: How to create your own @file{TAGS} table.
12208* Regexp Review::
12209* re-search Exercises::
12210@end menu
12211
d6adf7e7 12212@node sentence-end
8cda6f8f
GM
12213@section The Regular Expression for @code{sentence-end}
12214@findex sentence-end
12215
12216The symbol @code{sentence-end} is bound to the pattern that marks the
12217end of a sentence. What should this regular expression be?
12218
12219Clearly, a sentence may be ended by a period, a question mark, or an
12220exclamation mark. Indeed, in English, only clauses that end with one
12221of those three characters should be considered the end of a sentence.
12222This means that the pattern should include the character set:
12223
12224@smallexample
12225[.?!]
12226@end smallexample
12227
12228However, we do not want @code{forward-sentence} merely to jump to a
12229period, a question mark, or an exclamation mark, because such a character
12230might be used in the middle of a sentence. A period, for example, is
12231used after abbreviations. So other information is needed.
12232
12233According to convention, you type two spaces after every sentence, but
12234only one space after a period, a question mark, or an exclamation mark in
12235the body of a sentence. So a period, a question mark, or an exclamation
12236mark followed by two spaces is a good indicator of an end of sentence.
12237However, in a file, the two spaces may instead be a tab or the end of a
12238line. This means that the regular expression should include these three
12239items as alternatives.
12240
12241@need 800
12242This group of alternatives will look like this:
12243
12244@smallexample
12245@group
12246\\($\\| \\| \\)
12247 ^ ^^
12248 TAB SPC
12249@end group
12250@end smallexample
12251
12252@noindent
12253Here, @samp{$} indicates the end of the line, and I have pointed out
12254where the tab and two spaces are inserted in the expression. Both are
12255inserted by putting the actual characters into the expression.
12256
12257Two backslashes, @samp{\\}, are required before the parentheses and
12258vertical bars: the first backslash quotes the following backslash in
12259Emacs; and the second indicates that the following character, the
12260parenthesis or the vertical bar, is special.
12261
12262@need 1000
12263Also, a sentence may be followed by one or more carriage returns, like
12264this:
12265
12266@smallexample
12267@group
12268[
12269]*
12270@end group
12271@end smallexample
12272
12273@noindent
12274Like tabs and spaces, a carriage return is inserted into a regular
12275expression by inserting it literally. The asterisk indicates that the
12276@key{RET} is repeated zero or more times.
12277
12278But a sentence end does not consist only of a period, a question mark or
12279an exclamation mark followed by appropriate space: a closing quotation
12280mark or a closing brace of some kind may precede the space. Indeed more
12281than one such mark or brace may precede the space. These require a
12282expression that looks like this:
12283
12284@smallexample
12285[]\"')@}]*
12286@end smallexample
12287
12288In this expression, the first @samp{]} is the first character in the
12289expression; the second character is @samp{"}, which is preceded by a
12290@samp{\} to tell Emacs the @samp{"} is @emph{not} special. The last
12291three characters are @samp{'}, @samp{)}, and @samp{@}}.
12292
12293All this suggests what the regular expression pattern for matching the
12294end of a sentence should be; and, indeed, if we evaluate
12295@code{sentence-end} we find that it returns the following value:
12296
12297@smallexample
12298@group
12299sentence-end
12300 @result{} "[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| \\| \\)[
12301]*"
12302@end group
12303@end smallexample
12304
12305@noindent
12306(Well, not in GNU Emacs 22; that is because of an effort to make the
12307process simpler and to handle more glyphs and languages. When the
12308value of @code{sentence-end} is @code{nil}, then use the value defined
12309by the function @code{sentence-end}. (Here is a use of the difference
12310between a value and a function in Emacs Lisp.) The function returns a
12311value constructed from the variables @code{sentence-end-base},
12312@code{sentence-end-double-space}, @code{sentence-end-without-period},
12313and @code{sentence-end-without-space}. The critical variable is
12314@code{sentence-end-base}; its global value is similar to the one
12315described above but it also contains two additional quotation marks.
12316These have differing degrees of curliness. The
12317@code{sentence-end-without-period} variable, when true, tells Emacs
12318that a sentence may end without a period, such as text in Thai.)
12319
12320@ignore
12321@noindent
12322(Note that here the @key{TAB}, two spaces, and @key{RET} are shown
12323literally in the pattern.)
12324
12325This regular expression can be deciphered as follows:
12326
12327@table @code
12328@item [.?!]
12329The first part of the pattern is the three characters, a period, a question
12330mark and an exclamation mark, within square brackets. The pattern must
12331begin with one or other of these characters.
12332
12333@item []\"')@}]*
12334The second part of the pattern is the group of closing braces and
12335quotation marks, which can appear zero or more times. These may follow
12336the period, question mark or exclamation mark. In a regular expression,
12337the backslash, @samp{\}, followed by the double quotation mark,
12338@samp{"}, indicates the class of string-quote characters. Usually, the
12339double quotation mark is the only character in this class. The
12340asterisk, @samp{*}, indicates that the items in the previous group (the
12341group surrounded by square brackets, @samp{[]}) may be repeated zero or
12342more times.
12343
12344@item \\($\\| \\| \\)
12345The third part of the pattern is one or other of: either the end of a
12346line, or two blank spaces, or a tab. The double back-slashes are used
12347to prevent Emacs from reading the parentheses and vertical bars as part
12348of the search pattern; the parentheses are used to mark the group and
12349the vertical bars are used to indicated that the patterns to either side
12350of them are alternatives. The dollar sign is used to indicate the end
12351of a line and both the two spaces and the tab are each inserted as is to
12352indicate what they are.
12353
12354@item [@key{RET}]*
12355Finally, the last part of the pattern indicates that the end of the line
12356or the whitespace following the period, question mark or exclamation
12357mark may, but need not, be followed by one or more carriage returns. In
12358the pattern, the carriage return is inserted as an actual carriage
12359return between square brackets but here it is shown as @key{RET}.
12360@end table
12361@end ignore
12362
d6adf7e7 12363@node re-search-forward
8cda6f8f
GM
12364@section The @code{re-search-forward} Function
12365@findex re-search-forward
12366
12367The @code{re-search-forward} function is very like the
12368@code{search-forward} function. (@xref{search-forward, , The
12369@code{search-forward} Function}.)
12370
12371@code{re-search-forward} searches for a regular expression. If the
12372search is successful, it leaves point immediately after the last
12373character in the target. If the search is backwards, it leaves point
12374just before the first character in the target. You may tell
12375@code{re-search-forward} to return @code{t} for true. (Moving point
12376is therefore a `side effect'.)
12377
12378Like @code{search-forward}, the @code{re-search-forward} function takes
12379four arguments:
12380
12381@enumerate
12382@item
12383The first argument is the regular expression that the function searches
7b4b1301 12384for. The regular expression will be a string between quotation marks.
8cda6f8f
GM
12385
12386@item
12387The optional second argument limits how far the function will search; it is a
12388bound, which is specified as a position in the buffer.
12389
12390@item
12391The optional third argument specifies how the function responds to
12392failure: @code{nil} as the third argument causes the function to
12393signal an error (and print a message) when the search fails; any other
12394value causes it to return @code{nil} if the search fails and @code{t}
12395if the search succeeds.
12396
12397@item
12398The optional fourth argument is the repeat count. A negative repeat
12399count causes @code{re-search-forward} to search backwards.
12400@end enumerate
12401
12402@need 800
12403The template for @code{re-search-forward} looks like this:
12404
12405@smallexample
12406@group
12407(re-search-forward "@var{regular-expression}"
12408 @var{limit-of-search}
12409 @var{what-to-do-if-search-fails}
12410 @var{repeat-count})
12411@end group
12412@end smallexample
12413
12414The second, third, and fourth arguments are optional. However, if you
12415want to pass a value to either or both of the last two arguments, you
12416must also pass a value to all the preceding arguments. Otherwise, the
12417Lisp interpreter will mistake which argument you are passing the value
12418to.
12419
12420@need 1200
12421In the @code{forward-sentence} function, the regular expression will be
12422the value of the variable @code{sentence-end}. In simple form, that is:
12423
12424@smallexample
12425@group
12426"[.?!][]\"')@}]*\\($\\| \\| \\)[
12427]*"
12428@end group
12429@end smallexample
12430
12431@noindent
12432The limit of the search will be the end of the paragraph (since a
12433sentence cannot go beyond a paragraph). If the search fails, the
12434function will return @code{nil}; and the repeat count will be provided
12435by the argument to the @code{forward-sentence} function.
12436
d6adf7e7 12437@node forward-sentence
8cda6f8f
GM
12438@section @code{forward-sentence}
12439@findex forward-sentence
12440
12441The command to move the cursor forward a sentence is a straightforward
12442illustration of how to use regular expression searches in Emacs Lisp.
12443Indeed, the function looks longer and more complicated than it is; this
12444is because the function is designed to go backwards as well as forwards;
12445and, optionally, over more than one sentence. The function is usually
12446bound to the key command @kbd{M-e}.
12447
12448@menu
12449* Complete forward-sentence::
12450* fwd-sentence while loops:: Two @code{while} loops.
12451* fwd-sentence re-search:: A regular expression search.
12452@end menu
12453
8cda6f8f 12454@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 12455@node Complete forward-sentence
8cda6f8f
GM
12456@unnumberedsubsec Complete @code{forward-sentence} function definition
12457@end ifnottex
12458
12459@need 1250
12460Here is the code for @code{forward-sentence}:
12461
12462@c in GNU Emacs 22
12463@smallexample
12464@group
12465(defun forward-sentence (&optional arg)
12466 "Move forward to next `sentence-end'. With argument, repeat.
12467With negative argument, move backward repeatedly to `sentence-beginning'.
12468
12469The variable `sentence-end' is a regular expression that matches ends of
12470sentences. Also, every paragraph boundary terminates sentences as well."
12471@end group
12472@group
12473 (interactive "p")
12474 (or arg (setq arg 1))
12475 (let ((opoint (point))
12476 (sentence-end (sentence-end)))
12477 (while (< arg 0)
12478 (let ((pos (point))
12479 (par-beg (save-excursion (start-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12480 (if (and (re-search-backward sentence-end par-beg t)
12481 (or (< (match-end 0) pos)
12482 (re-search-backward sentence-end par-beg t)))
12483 (goto-char (match-end 0))
12484 (goto-char par-beg)))
12485 (setq arg (1+ arg)))
12486@end group
12487@group
12488 (while (> arg 0)
12489 (let ((par-end (save-excursion (end-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12490 (if (re-search-forward sentence-end par-end t)
12491 (skip-chars-backward " \t\n")
12492 (goto-char par-end)))
12493 (setq arg (1- arg)))
12494 (constrain-to-field nil opoint t)))
12495@end group
12496@end smallexample
12497
12498@ignore
12499GNU Emacs 21
12500@smallexample
12501@group
12502(defun forward-sentence (&optional arg)
12503 "Move forward to next sentence-end. With argument, repeat.
12504With negative argument, move backward repeatedly to sentence-beginning.
12505Sentence ends are identified by the value of sentence-end
12506treated as a regular expression. Also, every paragraph boundary
12507terminates sentences as well."
12508@end group
12509@group
12510 (interactive "p")
12511 (or arg (setq arg 1))
12512 (while (< arg 0)
12513 (let ((par-beg
12514 (save-excursion (start-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12515 (if (re-search-backward
12516 (concat sentence-end "[^ \t\n]") par-beg t)
12517 (goto-char (1- (match-end 0)))
12518 (goto-char par-beg)))
12519 (setq arg (1+ arg)))
12520 (while (> arg 0)
12521 (let ((par-end
12522 (save-excursion (end-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12523 (if (re-search-forward sentence-end par-end t)
12524 (skip-chars-backward " \t\n")
12525 (goto-char par-end)))
12526 (setq arg (1- arg))))
12527@end group
12528@end smallexample
12529@end ignore
12530
12531The function looks long at first sight and it is best to look at its
12532skeleton first, and then its muscle. The way to see the skeleton is to
12533look at the expressions that start in the left-most columns:
12534
12535@smallexample
12536@group
12537(defun forward-sentence (&optional arg)
12538 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
12539 (interactive "p")
12540 (or arg (setq arg 1))
12541 (let ((opoint (point)) (sentence-end (sentence-end)))
12542 (while (< arg 0)
12543 (let ((pos (point))
12544 (par-beg (save-excursion (start-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12545 @var{rest-of-body-of-while-loop-when-going-backwards}
12546 (while (> arg 0)
12547 (let ((par-end (save-excursion (end-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12548 @var{rest-of-body-of-while-loop-when-going-forwards}
12549 @var{handle-forms-and-equivalent}
12550@end group
12551@end smallexample
12552
12553This looks much simpler! The function definition consists of
12554documentation, an @code{interactive} expression, an @code{or}
12555expression, a @code{let} expression, and @code{while} loops.
12556
12557Let's look at each of these parts in turn.
12558
12559We note that the documentation is thorough and understandable.
12560
12561The function has an @code{interactive "p"} declaration. This means
12562that the processed prefix argument, if any, is passed to the
12563function as its argument. (This will be a number.) If the function
12564is not passed an argument (it is optional) then the argument
12565@code{arg} will be bound to 1.
12566
12567When @code{forward-sentence} is called non-interactively without an
12568argument, @code{arg} is bound to @code{nil}. The @code{or} expression
12569handles this. What it does is either leave the value of @code{arg} as
12570it is, but only if @code{arg} is bound to a value; or it sets the
12571value of @code{arg} to 1, in the case when @code{arg} is bound to
12572@code{nil}.
12573
12574Next is a @code{let}. That specifies the values of two local
12575variables, @code{point} and @code{sentence-end}. The local value of
12576point, from before the search, is used in the
12577@code{constrain-to-field} function which handles forms and
12578equivalents. The @code{sentence-end} variable is set by the
12579@code{sentence-end} function.
12580
d6adf7e7 12581@node fwd-sentence while loops
8cda6f8f
GM
12582@unnumberedsubsec The @code{while} loops
12583
12584Two @code{while} loops follow. The first @code{while} has a
12585true-or-false-test that tests true if the prefix argument for
12586@code{forward-sentence} is a negative number. This is for going
12587backwards. The body of this loop is similar to the body of the second
12588@code{while} clause, but it is not exactly the same. We will skip
12589this @code{while} loop and concentrate on the second @code{while}
12590loop.
12591
12592@need 1500
12593The second @code{while} loop is for moving point forward. Its skeleton
12594looks like this:
12595
12596@smallexample
12597@group
12598(while (> arg 0) ; @r{true-or-false-test}
12599 (let @var{varlist}
12600 (if (@var{true-or-false-test})
12601 @var{then-part}
12602 @var{else-part}
12603 (setq arg (1- arg)))) ; @code{while} @r{loop decrementer}
12604@end group
12605@end smallexample
12606
12607The @code{while} loop is of the decrementing kind.
12608(@xref{Decrementing Loop, , A Loop with a Decrementing Counter}.) It
12609has a true-or-false-test that tests true so long as the counter (in
12610this case, the variable @code{arg}) is greater than zero; and it has a
12611decrementer that subtracts 1 from the value of the counter every time
12612the loop repeats.
12613
12614If no prefix argument is given to @code{forward-sentence}, which is
12615the most common way the command is used, this @code{while} loop will
12616run once, since the value of @code{arg} will be 1.
12617
12618The body of the @code{while} loop consists of a @code{let} expression,
12619which creates and binds a local variable, and has, as its body, an
12620@code{if} expression.
12621
12622@need 1250
12623The body of the @code{while} loop looks like this:
12624
12625@smallexample
12626@group
12627(let ((par-end
12628 (save-excursion (end-of-paragraph-text) (point))))
12629 (if (re-search-forward sentence-end par-end t)
12630 (skip-chars-backward " \t\n")
12631 (goto-char par-end)))
12632@end group
12633@end smallexample
12634
12635The @code{let} expression creates and binds the local variable
12636@code{par-end}. As we shall see, this local variable is designed to
12637provide a bound or limit to the regular expression search. If the
12638search fails to find a proper sentence ending in the paragraph, it will
12639stop on reaching the end of the paragraph.
12640
12641But first, let us examine how @code{par-end} is bound to the value of
12642the end of the paragraph. What happens is that the @code{let} sets the
12643value of @code{par-end} to the value returned when the Lisp interpreter
12644evaluates the expression
12645
12646@smallexample
12647@group
12648(save-excursion (end-of-paragraph-text) (point))
12649@end group
12650@end smallexample
12651
12652@noindent
12653In this expression, @code{(end-of-paragraph-text)} moves point to the
12654end of the paragraph, @code{(point)} returns the value of point, and then
12655@code{save-excursion} restores point to its original position. Thus,
12656the @code{let} binds @code{par-end} to the value returned by the
12657@code{save-excursion} expression, which is the position of the end of
12658the paragraph. (The @code{end-of-paragraph-text} function uses
12659@code{forward-paragraph}, which we will discuss shortly.)
12660
12661@need 1200
12662Emacs next evaluates the body of the @code{let}, which is an @code{if}
12663expression that looks like this:
12664
12665@smallexample
12666@group
12667(if (re-search-forward sentence-end par-end t) ; @r{if-part}
12668 (skip-chars-backward " \t\n") ; @r{then-part}
12669 (goto-char par-end))) ; @r{else-part}
12670@end group
12671@end smallexample
12672
12673The @code{if} tests whether its first argument is true and if so,
12674evaluates its then-part; otherwise, the Emacs Lisp interpreter
12675evaluates the else-part. The true-or-false-test of the @code{if}
12676expression is the regular expression search.
12677
12678It may seem odd to have what looks like the `real work' of
12679the @code{forward-sentence} function buried here, but this is a common
12680way this kind of operation is carried out in Lisp.
12681
d6adf7e7 12682@node fwd-sentence re-search
8cda6f8f
GM
12683@unnumberedsubsec The regular expression search
12684
12685The @code{re-search-forward} function searches for the end of the
12686sentence, that is, for the pattern defined by the @code{sentence-end}
12687regular expression. If the pattern is found---if the end of the sentence is
12688found---then the @code{re-search-forward} function does two things:
12689
12690@enumerate
12691@item
12692The @code{re-search-forward} function carries out a side effect, which
12693is to move point to the end of the occurrence found.
12694
12695@item
12696The @code{re-search-forward} function returns a value of true. This is
12697the value received by the @code{if}, and means that the search was
12698successful.
12699@end enumerate
12700
12701@noindent
12702The side effect, the movement of point, is completed before the
12703@code{if} function is handed the value returned by the successful
12704conclusion of the search.
12705
12706When the @code{if} function receives the value of true from a successful
12707call to @code{re-search-forward}, the @code{if} evaluates the then-part,
12708which is the expression @code{(skip-chars-backward " \t\n")}. This
12709expression moves backwards over any blank spaces, tabs or carriage
12710returns until a printed character is found and then leaves point after
12711the character. Since point has already been moved to the end of the
12712pattern that marks the end of the sentence, this action leaves point
12713right after the closing printed character of the sentence, which is
12714usually a period.
12715
12716On the other hand, if the @code{re-search-forward} function fails to
12717find a pattern marking the end of the sentence, the function returns
12718false. The false then causes the @code{if} to evaluate its third
12719argument, which is @code{(goto-char par-end)}: it moves point to the
12720end of the paragraph.
12721
12722(And if the text is in a form or equivalent, and point may not move
12723fully, then the @code{constrain-to-field} function comes into play.)
12724
12725Regular expression searches are exceptionally useful and the pattern
12726illustrated by @code{re-search-forward}, in which the search is the
12727test of an @code{if} expression, is handy. You will see or write code
12728incorporating this pattern often.
12729
d6adf7e7 12730@node forward-paragraph
8cda6f8f
GM
12731@section @code{forward-paragraph}: a Goldmine of Functions
12732@findex forward-paragraph
12733
12734@ignore
12735@c in GNU Emacs 22
12736(defun forward-paragraph (&optional arg)
12737 "Move forward to end of paragraph.
12738With argument ARG, do it ARG times;
12739a negative argument ARG = -N means move backward N paragraphs.
12740
12741A line which `paragraph-start' matches either separates paragraphs
12742\(if `paragraph-separate' matches it also) or is the first line of a paragraph.
12743A paragraph end is the beginning of a line which is not part of the paragraph
12744to which the end of the previous line belongs, or the end of the buffer.
12745Returns the count of paragraphs left to move."
12746 (interactive "p")
12747 (or arg (setq arg 1))
12748 (let* ((opoint (point))
12749 (fill-prefix-regexp
12750 (and fill-prefix (not (equal fill-prefix ""))
12751 (not paragraph-ignore-fill-prefix)
12752 (regexp-quote fill-prefix)))
12753 ;; Remove ^ from paragraph-start and paragraph-sep if they are there.
12754 ;; These regexps shouldn't be anchored, because we look for them
12755 ;; starting at the left-margin. This allows paragraph commands to
12756 ;; work normally with indented text.
12757 ;; This hack will not find problem cases like "whatever\\|^something".
12758 (parstart (if (and (not (equal "" paragraph-start))
12759 (equal ?^ (aref paragraph-start 0)))
12760 (substring paragraph-start 1)
12761 paragraph-start))
12762 (parsep (if (and (not (equal "" paragraph-separate))
12763 (equal ?^ (aref paragraph-separate 0)))
12764 (substring paragraph-separate 1)
12765 paragraph-separate))
12766 (parsep
12767 (if fill-prefix-regexp
12768 (concat parsep "\\|"
12769 fill-prefix-regexp "[ \t]*$")
12770 parsep))
12771 ;; This is used for searching.
12772 (sp-parstart (concat "^[ \t]*\\(?:" parstart "\\|" parsep "\\)"))
12773 start found-start)
12774 (while (and (< arg 0) (not (bobp)))
12775 (if (and (not (looking-at parsep))
12776 (re-search-backward "^\n" (max (1- (point)) (point-min)) t)
12777 (looking-at parsep))
12778 (setq arg (1+ arg))
12779 (setq start (point))
12780 ;; Move back over paragraph-separating lines.
12781 (forward-char -1) (beginning-of-line)
12782 (while (and (not (bobp))
12783 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
12784 (looking-at parsep)))
12785 (forward-line -1))
12786 (if (bobp)
12787 nil
12788 (setq arg (1+ arg))
12789 ;; Go to end of the previous (non-separating) line.
12790 (end-of-line)
12791 ;; Search back for line that starts or separates paragraphs.
12792 (if (if fill-prefix-regexp
12793 ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides parstart.
12794 (let (multiple-lines)
12795 (while (and (progn (beginning-of-line) (not (bobp)))
12796 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
12797 (not (looking-at parsep)))
12798 (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
12799 (unless (= (point) start)
12800 (setq multiple-lines t))
12801 (forward-line -1))
12802 (move-to-left-margin)
12803 ;; This deleted code caused a long hanging-indent line
12804 ;; not to be filled together with the following lines.
12805 ;; ;; Don't move back over a line before the paragraph
12806 ;; ;; which doesn't start with fill-prefix
12807 ;; ;; unless that is the only line we've moved over.
12808 ;; (and (not (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
12809 ;; multiple-lines
12810 ;; (forward-line 1))
12811 (not (bobp)))
12812 (while (and (re-search-backward sp-parstart nil 1)
12813 (setq found-start t)
12814 ;; Found a candidate, but need to check if it is a
12815 ;; REAL parstart.
12816 (progn (setq start (point))
12817 (move-to-left-margin)
12818 (not (looking-at parsep)))
12819 (not (and (looking-at parstart)
12820 (or (not use-hard-newlines)
12821 (bobp)
12822 (get-text-property
12823 (1- start) 'hard)))))
12824 (setq found-start nil)
12825 (goto-char start))
12826 found-start)
12827 ;; Found one.
12828 (progn
12829 ;; Move forward over paragraph separators.
12830 ;; We know this cannot reach the place we started
12831 ;; because we know we moved back over a non-separator.
12832 (while (and (not (eobp))
12833 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
12834 (looking-at parsep)))
12835 (forward-line 1))
12836 ;; If line before paragraph is just margin, back up to there.
12837 (end-of-line 0)
12838 (if (> (current-column) (current-left-margin))
12839 (forward-char 1)
12840 (skip-chars-backward " \t")
12841 (if (not (bolp))
12842 (forward-line 1))))
12843 ;; No starter or separator line => use buffer beg.
12844 (goto-char (point-min))))))
12845
12846 (while (and (> arg 0) (not (eobp)))
12847 ;; Move forward over separator lines...
12848 (while (and (not (eobp))
12849 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
12850 (looking-at parsep))
12851 (forward-line 1))
12852 (unless (eobp) (setq arg (1- arg)))
12853 ;; ... and one more line.
12854 (forward-line 1)
12855 (if fill-prefix-regexp
12856 ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides parstart.
12857 (while (and (not (eobp))
12858 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
12859 (not (looking-at parsep))
12860 (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
12861 (forward-line 1))
12862 (while (and (re-search-forward sp-parstart nil 1)
12863 (progn (setq start (match-beginning 0))
12864 (goto-char start)
12865 (not (eobp)))
12866 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
12867 (not (looking-at parsep)))
12868 (or (not (looking-at parstart))
12869 (and use-hard-newlines
12870 (not (get-text-property (1- start) 'hard)))))
12871 (forward-char 1))
12872 (if (< (point) (point-max))
12873 (goto-char start))))
12874 (constrain-to-field nil opoint t)
12875 ;; Return the number of steps that could not be done.
12876 arg))
12877@end ignore
12878
12879The @code{forward-paragraph} function moves point forward to the end
12880of the paragraph. It is usually bound to @kbd{M-@}} and makes use of a
12881number of functions that are important in themselves, including
12882@code{let*}, @code{match-beginning}, and @code{looking-at}.
12883
12884The function definition for @code{forward-paragraph} is considerably
12885longer than the function definition for @code{forward-sentence}
12886because it works with a paragraph, each line of which may begin with a
12887fill prefix.
12888
12889A fill prefix consists of a string of characters that are repeated at
12890the beginning of each line. For example, in Lisp code, it is a
12891convention to start each line of a paragraph-long comment with
12892@samp{;;; }. In Text mode, four blank spaces make up another common
12893fill prefix, creating an indented paragraph. (@xref{Fill Prefix, , ,
12894emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for more information about fill
12895prefixes.)
12896
12897The existence of a fill prefix means that in addition to being able to
12898find the end of a paragraph whose lines begin on the left-most
12899column, the @code{forward-paragraph} function must be able to find the
12900end of a paragraph when all or many of the lines in the buffer begin
12901with the fill prefix.
12902
12903Moreover, it is sometimes practical to ignore a fill prefix that
12904exists, especially when blank lines separate paragraphs.
12905This is an added complication.
12906
12907@menu
12908* forward-paragraph in brief:: Key parts of the function definition.
12909* fwd-para let:: The @code{let*} expression.
12910* fwd-para while:: The forward motion @code{while} loop.
12911@end menu
12912
8cda6f8f 12913@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 12914@node forward-paragraph in brief
8cda6f8f
GM
12915@unnumberedsubsec Shortened @code{forward-paragraph} function definition
12916@end ifnottex
12917
12918Rather than print all of the @code{forward-paragraph} function, we
12919will only print parts of it. Read without preparation, the function
12920can be daunting!
12921
12922@need 800
12923In outline, the function looks like this:
12924
12925@smallexample
12926@group
12927(defun forward-paragraph (&optional arg)
12928 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
12929 (interactive "p")
12930 (or arg (setq arg 1))
12931 (let*
12932 @var{varlist}
12933 (while (and (< arg 0) (not (bobp))) ; @r{backward-moving-code}
12934 @dots{}
12935 (while (and (> arg 0) (not (eobp))) ; @r{forward-moving-code}
12936 @dots{}
12937@end group
12938@end smallexample
12939
12940The first parts of the function are routine: the function's argument
12941list consists of one optional argument. Documentation follows.
12942
12943The lower case @samp{p} in the @code{interactive} declaration means
12944that the processed prefix argument, if any, is passed to the function.
12945This will be a number, and is the repeat count of how many paragraphs
12946point will move. The @code{or} expression in the next line handles
12947the common case when no argument is passed to the function, which occurs
12948if the function is called from other code rather than interactively.
12949This case was described earlier. (@xref{forward-sentence, The
12950@code{forward-sentence} function}.) Now we reach the end of the
12951familiar part of this function.
12952
d6adf7e7 12953@node fwd-para let
8cda6f8f
GM
12954@unnumberedsubsec The @code{let*} expression
12955
12956The next line of the @code{forward-paragraph} function begins a
12957@code{let*} expression. This is a different than @code{let}. The
12958symbol is @code{let*} not @code{let}.
12959
12960The @code{let*} special form is like @code{let} except that Emacs sets
12961each variable in sequence, one after another, and variables in the
12962latter part of the varlist can make use of the values to which Emacs
12963set variables in the earlier part of the varlist.
12964
12965@ignore
12966( refappend save-excursion, , code save-excursion in code append-to-buffer .)
12967@end ignore
12968
12969(@ref{append save-excursion, , @code{save-excursion} in @code{append-to-buffer}}.)
12970
12971In the @code{let*} expression in this function, Emacs binds a total of
12972seven variables: @code{opoint}, @code{fill-prefix-regexp},
12973@code{parstart}, @code{parsep}, @code{sp-parstart}, @code{start}, and
12974@code{found-start}.
12975
12976The variable @code{parsep} appears twice, first, to remove instances
12977of @samp{^}, and second, to handle fill prefixes.
12978
12979The variable @code{opoint} is just the value of @code{point}. As you
12980can guess, it is used in a @code{constrain-to-field} expression, just
12981as in @code{forward-sentence}.
12982
12983The variable @code{fill-prefix-regexp} is set to the value returned by
12984evaluating the following list:
12985
12986@smallexample
12987@group
12988(and fill-prefix
12989 (not (equal fill-prefix ""))
12990 (not paragraph-ignore-fill-prefix)
12991 (regexp-quote fill-prefix))
12992@end group
12993@end smallexample
12994
12995@noindent
12996This is an expression whose first element is the @code{and} special form.
12997
12998As we learned earlier (@pxref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new}
12999function}), the @code{and} special form evaluates each of its
13000arguments until one of the arguments returns a value of @code{nil}, in
13001which case the @code{and} expression returns @code{nil}; however, if
13002none of the arguments returns a value of @code{nil}, the value
13003resulting from evaluating the last argument is returned. (Since such
13004a value is not @code{nil}, it is considered true in Lisp.) In other
13005words, an @code{and} expression returns a true value only if all its
13006arguments are true.
13007@findex and
13008
13009In this case, the variable @code{fill-prefix-regexp} is bound to a
13010non-@code{nil} value only if the following four expressions produce a
13011true (i.e., a non-@code{nil}) value when they are evaluated; otherwise,
13012@code{fill-prefix-regexp} is bound to @code{nil}.
13013
13014@table @code
13015@item fill-prefix
13016When this variable is evaluated, the value of the fill prefix, if any,
13017is returned. If there is no fill prefix, this variable returns
13018@code{nil}.
13019
13020@item (not (equal fill-prefix "")
13021This expression checks whether an existing fill prefix is an empty
13022string, that is, a string with no characters in it. An empty string is
13023not a useful fill prefix.
13024
13025@item (not paragraph-ignore-fill-prefix)
13026This expression returns @code{nil} if the variable
13027@code{paragraph-ignore-fill-prefix} has been turned on by being set to a
13028true value such as @code{t}.
13029
13030@item (regexp-quote fill-prefix)
13031This is the last argument to the @code{and} special form. If all the
13032arguments to the @code{and} are true, the value resulting from
13033evaluating this expression will be returned by the @code{and} expression
13034and bound to the variable @code{fill-prefix-regexp},
13035@end table
13036
13037@findex regexp-quote
13038@noindent
13039The result of evaluating this @code{and} expression successfully is that
13040@code{fill-prefix-regexp} will be bound to the value of
13041@code{fill-prefix} as modified by the @code{regexp-quote} function.
13042What @code{regexp-quote} does is read a string and return a regular
13043expression that will exactly match the string and match nothing else.
13044This means that @code{fill-prefix-regexp} will be set to a value that
13045will exactly match the fill prefix if the fill prefix exists.
13046Otherwise, the variable will be set to @code{nil}.
13047
13048The next two local variables in the @code{let*} expression are
13049designed to remove instances of @samp{^} from @code{parstart} and
13050@code{parsep}, the local variables which indicate the paragraph start
13051and the paragraph separator. The next expression sets @code{parsep}
13052again. That is to handle fill prefixes.
13053
13054This is the setting that requires the definition call @code{let*}
13055rather than @code{let}. The true-or-false-test for the @code{if}
13056depends on whether the variable @code{fill-prefix-regexp} evaluates to
13057@code{nil} or some other value.
13058
13059If @code{fill-prefix-regexp} does not have a value, Emacs evaluates
13060the else-part of the @code{if} expression and binds @code{parsep} to
13061its local value. (@code{parsep} is a regular expression that matches
13062what separates paragraphs.)
13063
13064But if @code{fill-prefix-regexp} does have a value, Emacs evaluates
13065the then-part of the @code{if} expression and binds @code{parsep} to a
13066regular expression that includes the @code{fill-prefix-regexp} as part
13067of the pattern.
13068
13069Specifically, @code{parsep} is set to the original value of the
13070paragraph separate regular expression concatenated with an alternative
13071expression that consists of the @code{fill-prefix-regexp} followed by
13072optional whitespace to the end of the line. The whitespace is defined
13073by @w{@code{"[ \t]*$"}}.) The @samp{\\|} defines this portion of the
13074regexp as an alternative to @code{parsep}.
13075
13076According to a comment in the code, the next local variable,
13077@code{sp-parstart}, is used for searching, and then the final two,
13078@code{start} and @code{found-start}, are set to @code{nil}.
13079
13080Now we get into the body of the @code{let*}. The first part of the body
13081of the @code{let*} deals with the case when the function is given a
13082negative argument and is therefore moving backwards. We will skip this
13083section.
13084
d6adf7e7 13085@node fwd-para while
8cda6f8f
GM
13086@unnumberedsubsec The forward motion @code{while} loop
13087
13088The second part of the body of the @code{let*} deals with forward
13089motion. It is a @code{while} loop that repeats itself so long as the
13090value of @code{arg} is greater than zero. In the most common use of
13091the function, the value of the argument is 1, so the body of the
13092@code{while} loop is evaluated exactly once, and the cursor moves
13093forward one paragraph.
13094
13095@ignore
13096(while (and (> arg 0) (not (eobp)))
13097
13098 ;; Move forward over separator lines...
13099 (while (and (not (eobp))
13100 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
13101 (looking-at parsep))
13102 (forward-line 1))
13103 (unless (eobp) (setq arg (1- arg)))
13104 ;; ... and one more line.
13105 (forward-line 1)
13106
13107 (if fill-prefix-regexp
13108 ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides parstart.
13109 (while (and (not (eobp))
13110 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
13111 (not (looking-at parsep))
13112 (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
13113 (forward-line 1))
13114
13115 (while (and (re-search-forward sp-parstart nil 1)
13116 (progn (setq start (match-beginning 0))
13117 (goto-char start)
13118 (not (eobp)))
13119 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
13120 (not (looking-at parsep)))
13121 (or (not (looking-at parstart))
13122 (and use-hard-newlines
13123 (not (get-text-property (1- start) 'hard)))))
13124 (forward-char 1))
13125
13126 (if (< (point) (point-max))
13127 (goto-char start))))
13128@end ignore
13129
13130This part handles three situations: when point is between paragraphs,
13131when there is a fill prefix and when there is no fill prefix.
13132
13133@need 800
13134The @code{while} loop looks like this:
13135
13136@smallexample
13137@group
13138;; @r{going forwards and not at the end of the buffer}
13139(while (and (> arg 0) (not (eobp)))
13140
13141 ;; @r{between paragraphs}
13142 ;; Move forward over separator lines...
13143 (while (and (not (eobp))
13144 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
13145 (looking-at parsep))
13146 (forward-line 1))
13147 ;; @r{This decrements the loop}
13148 (unless (eobp) (setq arg (1- arg)))
13149 ;; ... and one more line.
13150 (forward-line 1)
13151@end group
13152
13153@group
13154 (if fill-prefix-regexp
13155 ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides parstart;
13156 ;; we go forward line by line
13157 (while (and (not (eobp))
13158 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
13159 (not (looking-at parsep))
13160 (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
13161 (forward-line 1))
13162@end group
13163
13164@group
13165 ;; There is no fill prefix;
13166 ;; we go forward character by character
13167 (while (and (re-search-forward sp-parstart nil 1)
13168 (progn (setq start (match-beginning 0))
13169 (goto-char start)
13170 (not (eobp)))
13171 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
13172 (not (looking-at parsep)))
13173 (or (not (looking-at parstart))
13174 (and use-hard-newlines
13175 (not (get-text-property (1- start) 'hard)))))
13176 (forward-char 1))
13177@end group
13178
13179@group
13180 ;; and if there is no fill prefix and if we are not at the end,
13181 ;; go to whatever was found in the regular expression search
13182 ;; for sp-parstart
13183 (if (< (point) (point-max))
13184 (goto-char start))))
13185@end group
13186@end smallexample
13187
13188@findex eobp
13189We can see that this is a decrementing counter @code{while} loop,
13190using the expression @code{(setq arg (1- arg))} as the decrementer.
13191That expression is not far from the @code{while}, but is hidden in
13192another Lisp macro, an @code{unless} macro. Unless we are at the end
f99f1641
PE
13193of the buffer---that is what the @code{eobp} function determines; it
13194is an abbreviation of @samp{End Of Buffer P}---we decrease the value
8cda6f8f
GM
13195of @code{arg} by one.
13196
13197(If we are at the end of the buffer, we cannot go forward any more and
13198the next loop of the @code{while} expression will test false since the
13199test is an @code{and} with @code{(not (eobp))}. The @code{not}
13200function means exactly as you expect; it is another name for
13201@code{null}, a function that returns true when its argument is false.)
13202
13203Interestingly, the loop count is not decremented until we leave the
13204space between paragraphs, unless we come to the end of buffer or stop
13205seeing the local value of the paragraph separator.
13206
13207That second @code{while} also has a @code{(move-to-left-margin)}
13208expression. The function is self-explanatory. It is inside a
13209@code{progn} expression and not the last element of its body, so it is
13210only invoked for its side effect, which is to move point to the left
13211margin of the current line.
13212
13213@findex looking-at
13214The @code{looking-at} function is also self-explanatory; it returns
13215true if the text after point matches the regular expression given as
13216its argument.
13217
13218The rest of the body of the loop looks difficult at first, but makes
13219sense as you come to understand it.
13220
13221@need 800
13222First consider what happens if there is a fill prefix:
13223
13224@smallexample
13225@group
13226 (if fill-prefix-regexp
13227 ;; There is a fill prefix; it overrides parstart;
13228 ;; we go forward line by line
13229 (while (and (not (eobp))
13230 (progn (move-to-left-margin) (not (eobp)))
13231 (not (looking-at parsep))
13232 (looking-at fill-prefix-regexp))
13233 (forward-line 1))
13234@end group
13235@end smallexample
13236
13237@noindent
13238This expression moves point forward line by line so long
13239as four conditions are true:
13240
13241@enumerate
13242@item
13243Point is not at the end of the buffer.
13244
13245@item
13246We can move to the left margin of the text and are
13247not at the end of the buffer.
13248
13249@item
13250The text following point does not separate paragraphs.
13251
13252@item
13253The pattern following point is the fill prefix regular expression.
13254@end enumerate
13255
13256The last condition may be puzzling, until you remember that point was
13257moved to the beginning of the line early in the @code{forward-paragraph}
13258function. This means that if the text has a fill prefix, the
13259@code{looking-at} function will see it.
13260
13261@need 1250
13262Consider what happens when there is no fill prefix.
13263
13264@smallexample
13265@group
13266 (while (and (re-search-forward sp-parstart nil 1)
13267 (progn (setq start (match-beginning 0))
13268 (goto-char start)
13269 (not (eobp)))
13270 (progn (move-to-left-margin)
13271 (not (looking-at parsep)))
13272 (or (not (looking-at parstart))
13273 (and use-hard-newlines
13274 (not (get-text-property (1- start) 'hard)))))
13275 (forward-char 1))
13276@end group
13277@end smallexample
13278
13279@noindent
13280This @code{while} loop has us searching forward for
13281@code{sp-parstart}, which is the combination of possible whitespace
13282with a the local value of the start of a paragraph or of a paragraph
13283separator. (The latter two are within an expression starting
13284@code{\(?:} so that they are not referenced by the
13285@code{match-beginning} function.)
13286
13287@need 800
13288The two expressions,
13289
13290@smallexample
13291@group
13292(setq start (match-beginning 0))
13293(goto-char start)
13294@end group
13295@end smallexample
13296
13297@noindent
13298mean go to the start of the text matched by the regular expression
13299search.
13300
13301The @code{(match-beginning 0)} expression is new. It returns a number
13302specifying the location of the start of the text that was matched by
13303the last search.
13304
13305The @code{match-beginning} function is used here because of a
13306characteristic of a forward search: a successful forward search,
13307regardless of whether it is a plain search or a regular expression
13308search, moves point to the end of the text that is found. In this
13309case, a successful search moves point to the end of the pattern for
13310@code{sp-parstart}.
13311
13312However, we want to put point at the end of the current paragraph, not
13313somewhere else. Indeed, since the search possibly includes the
13314paragraph separator, point may end up at the beginning of the next one
13315unless we use an expression that includes @code{match-beginning}.
13316
13317@findex match-beginning
13318When given an argument of 0, @code{match-beginning} returns the
13319position that is the start of the text matched by the most recent
13320search. In this case, the most recent search looks for
13321@code{sp-parstart}. The @code{(match-beginning 0)} expression returns
13322the beginning position of that pattern, rather than the end position
13323of that pattern.
13324
13325(Incidentally, when passed a positive number as an argument, the
13326@code{match-beginning} function returns the location of point at that
13327parenthesized expression in the last search unless that parenthesized
13328expression begins with @code{\(?:}. I don't know why @code{\(?:}
13329appears here since the argument is 0.)
13330
13331@need 1250
13332The last expression when there is no fill prefix is
13333
13334@smallexample
13335@group
13336(if (< (point) (point-max))
13337 (goto-char start))))
13338@end group
13339@end smallexample
13340
13341@noindent
13342This says that if there is no fill prefix and if we are not at the
13343end, point should move to the beginning of whatever was found by the
13344regular expression search for @code{sp-parstart}.
13345
13346The full definition for the @code{forward-paragraph} function not only
13347includes code for going forwards, but also code for going backwards.
13348
13349If you are reading this inside of GNU Emacs and you want to see the
13350whole function, you can type @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function})
13351and the name of the function. This gives you the function
13352documentation and the name of the library containing the function's
13353source. Place point over the name of the library and press the RET
13354key; you will be taken directly to the source. (Be sure to install
13355your sources! Without them, you are like a person who tries to drive
13356a car with his eyes shut!)
13357
d6adf7e7 13358@node etags
8cda6f8f
GM
13359@section Create Your Own @file{TAGS} File
13360@findex etags
13361@cindex @file{TAGS} file, create own
13362
13363Besides @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}), another way to see the
13364source of a function is to type @kbd{M-.} (@code{find-tag}) and the
13365name of the function when prompted for it. This is a good habit to
13366get into. The @kbd{M-.} (@code{find-tag}) command takes you directly
13367to the source for a function, variable, or node. The function depends
13368on tags tables to tell it where to go.
13369
13370If the @code{find-tag} function first asks you for the name of a
13371@file{TAGS} table, give it the name of a @file{TAGS} file such as
13372@file{/usr/local/src/emacs/src/TAGS}. (The exact path to your
13373@file{TAGS} file depends on how your copy of Emacs was installed. I
13374just told you the location that provides both my C and my Emacs Lisp
13375sources.)
13376
13377You can also create your own @file{TAGS} file for directories that
13378lack one.
13379
13380You often need to build and install tags tables yourself. They are
13381not built automatically. A tags table is called a @file{TAGS} file;
13382the name is in upper case letters.
13383
13384You can create a @file{TAGS} file by calling the @code{etags} program
13385that comes as a part of the Emacs distribution. Usually, @code{etags}
13386is compiled and installed when Emacs is built. (@code{etags} is not
13387an Emacs Lisp function or a part of Emacs; it is a C program.)
13388
13389@need 1250
13390To create a @file{TAGS} file, first switch to the directory in which
13391you want to create the file. In Emacs you can do this with the
13392@kbd{M-x cd} command, or by visiting a file in the directory, or by
13393listing the directory with @kbd{C-x d} (@code{dired}). Then run the
13394compile command, with @w{@code{etags *.el}} as the command to execute
13395
13396@smallexample
13397M-x compile RET etags *.el RET
13398@end smallexample
13399
13400@noindent
13401to create a @file{TAGS} file for Emacs Lisp.
13402
13403For example, if you have a large number of files in your
13404@file{~/emacs} directory, as I do---I have 137 @file{.el} files in it,
13405of which I load 12---you can create a @file{TAGS} file for the Emacs
13406Lisp files in that directory.
13407
13408@need 1250
13409The @code{etags} program takes all the usual shell `wildcards'. For
13410example, if you have two directories for which you want a single
13411@file{TAGS} file, type @w{@code{etags *.el ../elisp/*.el}}, where
13412@file{../elisp/} is the second directory:
13413
13414@smallexample
13415M-x compile RET etags *.el ../elisp/*.el RET
13416@end smallexample
13417
13418@need 1250
13419Type
13420
13421@smallexample
13422M-x compile RET etags --help RET
13423@end smallexample
13424
13425@noindent
13426to see a list of the options accepted by @code{etags} as well as a
13427list of supported languages.
13428
13429The @code{etags} program handles more than 20 languages, including
13430Emacs Lisp, Common Lisp, Scheme, C, C++, Ada, Fortran, HTML, Java,
7877f373 13431LaTeX, Pascal, Perl, PostScript, Python, TeX, Texinfo, makefiles, and
8cda6f8f
GM
13432most assemblers. The program has no switches for specifying the
13433language; it recognizes the language in an input file according to its
13434file name and contents.
13435
13436@file{etags} is very helpful when you are writing code yourself and
13437want to refer back to functions you have already written. Just run
13438@code{etags} again at intervals as you write new functions, so they
13439become part of the @file{TAGS} file.
13440
13441If you think an appropriate @file{TAGS} file already exists for what
13442you want, but do not know where it is, you can use the @code{locate}
13443program to attempt to find it.
13444
13445Type @w{@kbd{M-x locate @key{RET} TAGS @key{RET}}} and Emacs will list
13446for you the full path names of all your @file{TAGS} files. On my
13447system, this command lists 34 @file{TAGS} files. On the other hand, a
13448`plain vanilla' system I recently installed did not contain any
13449@file{TAGS} files.
13450
13451If the tags table you want has been created, you can use the @code{M-x
13452visit-tags-table} command to specify it. Otherwise, you will need to
13453create the tag table yourself and then use @code{M-x
13454visit-tags-table}.
13455
13456@subsubheading Building Tags in the Emacs sources
13457@cindex Building Tags in the Emacs sources
13458@cindex Tags in the Emacs sources
13459@findex make tags
13460
13461The GNU Emacs sources come with a @file{Makefile} that contains a
13462sophisticated @code{etags} command that creates, collects, and merges
13463tags tables from all over the Emacs sources and puts the information
13464into one @file{TAGS} file in the @file{src/} directory. (The
13465@file{src/} directory is below the top level of your Emacs directory.)
13466
13467@need 1250
13468To build this @file{TAGS} file, go to the top level of your Emacs
13469source directory and run the compile command @code{make tags}:
13470
13471@smallexample
13472M-x compile RET make tags RET
13473@end smallexample
13474
13475@noindent
13476(The @code{make tags} command works well with the GNU Emacs sources,
13477as well as with some other source packages.)
13478
13479For more information, see @ref{Tags, , Tag Tables, emacs, The GNU Emacs
13480Manual}.
13481
d6adf7e7 13482@node Regexp Review
8cda6f8f
GM
13483@section Review
13484
13485Here is a brief summary of some recently introduced functions.
13486
13487@table @code
13488@item while
13489Repeatedly evaluate the body of the expression so long as the first
13490element of the body tests true. Then return @code{nil}. (The
13491expression is evaluated only for its side effects.)
13492
13493@need 1250
13494For example:
13495
13496@smallexample
13497@group
13498(let ((foo 2))
13499 (while (> foo 0)
13500 (insert (format "foo is %d.\n" foo))
13501 (setq foo (1- foo))))
13502
13503 @result{} foo is 2.
13504 foo is 1.
13505 nil
13506@end group
13507@end smallexample
13508
13509@noindent
13510(The @code{insert} function inserts its arguments at point; the
13511@code{format} function returns a string formatted from its arguments
13512the way @code{message} formats its arguments; @code{\n} produces a new
13513line.)
13514
13515@item re-search-forward
13516Search for a pattern, and if the pattern is found, move point to rest
13517just after it.
13518
13519@noindent
13520Takes four arguments, like @code{search-forward}:
13521
13522@enumerate
13523@item
13524A regular expression that specifies the pattern to search for.
13525(Remember to put quotation marks around this argument!)
13526
13527@item
13528Optionally, the limit of the search.
13529
13530@item
13531Optionally, what to do if the search fails, return @code{nil} or an
13532error message.
13533
13534@item
13535Optionally, how many times to repeat the search; if negative, the
13536search goes backwards.
13537@end enumerate
13538
13539@item let*
13540Bind some variables locally to particular values,
13541and then evaluate the remaining arguments, returning the value of the
13542last one. While binding the local variables, use the local values of
13543variables bound earlier, if any.
13544
13545@need 1250
13546For example:
13547
13548@smallexample
13549@group
13550(let* ((foo 7)
13551 (bar (* 3 foo)))
13552 (message "`bar' is %d." bar))
13553 @result{} `bar' is 21.
13554@end group
13555@end smallexample
13556
13557@item match-beginning
13558Return the position of the start of the text found by the last regular
13559expression search.
13560
13561@item looking-at
13562Return @code{t} for true if the text after point matches the argument,
13563which should be a regular expression.
13564
13565@item eobp
13566Return @code{t} for true if point is at the end of the accessible part
13567of a buffer. The end of the accessible part is the end of the buffer
13568if the buffer is not narrowed; it is the end of the narrowed part if
13569the buffer is narrowed.
13570@end table
13571
13572@need 1500
d6adf7e7 13573@node re-search Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
13574@section Exercises with @code{re-search-forward}
13575
13576@itemize @bullet
13577@item
13578Write a function to search for a regular expression that matches two
13579or more blank lines in sequence.
13580
13581@item
13582Write a function to search for duplicated words, such as `the the'.
13583@xref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs
13584Manual}, for information on how to write a regexp (a regular
13585expression) to match a string that is composed of two identical
13586halves. You can devise several regexps; some are better than others.
13587The function I use is described in an appendix, along with several
13588regexps. @xref{the-the, , @code{the-the} Duplicated Words Function}.
13589@end itemize
13590
d6adf7e7 13591@node Counting Words
8cda6f8f
GM
13592@chapter Counting: Repetition and Regexps
13593@cindex Repetition for word counting
13594@cindex Regular expressions for word counting
13595
13596Repetition and regular expression searches are powerful tools that you
13597often use when you write code in Emacs Lisp. This chapter illustrates
13598the use of regular expression searches through the construction of
13599word count commands using @code{while} loops and recursion.
13600
13601@menu
13602* Why Count Words::
ea4f7750 13603* @value{COUNT-WORDS}:: Use a regexp, but find a problem.
8cda6f8f
GM
13604* recursive-count-words:: Start with case of no words in region.
13605* Counting Exercise::
13606@end menu
13607
8cda6f8f 13608@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 13609@node Why Count Words
8cda6f8f
GM
13610@unnumberedsec Counting words
13611@end ifnottex
13612
ea4f7750
GM
13613The standard Emacs distribution contains functions for counting the
13614number of lines and words within a region.
8cda6f8f
GM
13615
13616Certain types of writing ask you to count words. Thus, if you write
13617an essay, you may be limited to 800 words; if you write a novel, you
ea4f7750
GM
13618may discipline yourself to write 1000 words a day. It seems odd, but
13619for a long time, Emacs lacked a word count command. Perhaps people used
13620Emacs mostly for code or types of documentation that did not require
13621word counts; or perhaps they restricted themselves to the operating
13622system word count command, @code{wc}. Alternatively, people may have
13623followed the publishers' convention and computed a word count by
13624dividing the number of characters in a document by five.
13625
13626There are many ways to implement a command to count words. Here are
13627some examples, which you may wish to compare with the standard Emacs
13628command, @code{count-words-region}.
13629
d6adf7e7 13630@node @value{COUNT-WORDS}
ea4f7750
GM
13631@section The @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} Function
13632@findex @value{COUNT-WORDS}
8cda6f8f
GM
13633
13634A word count command could count words in a line, paragraph, region,
13635or buffer. What should the command cover? You could design the
13636command to count the number of words in a complete buffer. However,
13637the Emacs tradition encourages flexibility---you may want to count
13638words in just a section, rather than all of a buffer. So it makes
13639more sense to design the command to count the number of words in a
ea4f7750 13640region. Once you have a command to count words in a region, you can,
8cda6f8f
GM
13641if you wish, count words in a whole buffer by marking it with
13642@w{@kbd{C-x h}} (@code{mark-whole-buffer}).
13643
13644Clearly, counting words is a repetitive act: starting from the
13645beginning of the region, you count the first word, then the second
13646word, then the third word, and so on, until you reach the end of the
13647region. This means that word counting is ideally suited to recursion
13648or to a @code{while} loop.
13649
13650@menu
ea4f7750
GM
13651* Design @value{COUNT-WORDS}:: The definition using a @code{while} loop.
13652* Whitespace Bug:: The Whitespace Bug in @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
8cda6f8f
GM
13653@end menu
13654
8cda6f8f 13655@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 13656@node Design @value{COUNT-WORDS}
ea4f7750 13657@unnumberedsubsec Designing @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f
GM
13658@end ifnottex
13659
13660First, we will implement the word count command with a @code{while}
13661loop, then with recursion. The command will, of course, be
13662interactive.
13663
13664@need 800
13665The template for an interactive function definition is, as always:
13666
13667@smallexample
13668@group
13669(defun @var{name-of-function} (@var{argument-list})
13670 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
13671 (@var{interactive-expression}@dots{})
13672 @var{body}@dots{})
13673@end group
13674@end smallexample
13675
13676What we need to do is fill in the slots.
13677
13678The name of the function should be self-explanatory and similar to the
13679existing @code{count-lines-region} name. This makes the name easier
ea4f7750
GM
13680to remember. @code{count-words-region} is the obvious choice. Since
13681that name is now used for the standard Emacs command to count words, we
13682will name our implementation @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
8cda6f8f
GM
13683
13684The function counts words within a region. This means that the
13685argument list must contain symbols that are bound to the two
13686positions, the beginning and end of the region. These two positions
13687can be called @samp{beginning} and @samp{end} respectively. The first
13688line of the documentation should be a single sentence, since that is
13689all that is printed as documentation by a command such as
13690@code{apropos}. The interactive expression will be of the form
13691@samp{(interactive "r")}, since that will cause Emacs to pass the
13692beginning and end of the region to the function's argument list. All
13693this is routine.
13694
13695The body of the function needs to be written to do three tasks:
13696first, to set up conditions under which the @code{while} loop can
13697count words, second, to run the @code{while} loop, and third, to send
13698a message to the user.
13699
ea4f7750 13700When a user calls @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}, point may be at the
8cda6f8f
GM
13701beginning or the end of the region. However, the counting process
13702must start at the beginning of the region. This means we will want
13703to put point there if it is not already there. Executing
13704@code{(goto-char beginning)} ensures this. Of course, we will want to
13705return point to its expected position when the function finishes its
13706work. For this reason, the body must be enclosed in a
13707@code{save-excursion} expression.
13708
13709The central part of the body of the function consists of a
13710@code{while} loop in which one expression jumps point forward word by
13711word, and another expression counts those jumps. The true-or-false-test
13712of the @code{while} loop should test true so long as point should jump
13713forward, and false when point is at the end of the region.
13714
13715We could use @code{(forward-word 1)} as the expression for moving point
13716forward word by word, but it is easier to see what Emacs identifies as a
13717`word' if we use a regular expression search.
13718
13719A regular expression search that finds the pattern for which it is
13720searching leaves point after the last character matched. This means
13721that a succession of successful word searches will move point forward
13722word by word.
13723
13724As a practical matter, we want the regular expression search to jump
13725over whitespace and punctuation between words as well as over the
13726words themselves. A regexp that refuses to jump over interword
13727whitespace would never jump more than one word! This means that
13728the regexp should include the whitespace and punctuation that follows
13729a word, if any, as well as the word itself. (A word may end a buffer
13730and not have any following whitespace or punctuation, so that part of
13731the regexp must be optional.)
13732
13733Thus, what we want for the regexp is a pattern defining one or more
13734word constituent characters followed, optionally, by one or more
13735characters that are not word constituents. The regular expression for
13736this is:
13737
13738@smallexample
13739\w+\W*
13740@end smallexample
13741
13742@noindent
13743The buffer's syntax table determines which characters are and are not
0fd2c9a3
GM
13744word constituents. For more information about syntax,
13745@pxref{Syntax Tables, , Syntax Tables, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
13746Reference Manual}.
8cda6f8f
GM
13747
13748@need 800
13749The search expression looks like this:
13750
13751@smallexample
13752(re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*")
13753@end smallexample
13754
13755@noindent
13756(Note that paired backslashes precede the @samp{w} and @samp{W}. A
13757single backslash has special meaning to the Emacs Lisp interpreter.
13758It indicates that the following character is interpreted differently
13759than usual. For example, the two characters, @samp{\n}, stand for
13760@samp{newline}, rather than for a backslash followed by @samp{n}. Two
13761backslashes in a row stand for an ordinary, `unspecial' backslash, so
13762Emacs Lisp interpreter ends of seeing a single backslash followed by a
13763letter. So it discovers the letter is special.)
13764
13765We need a counter to count how many words there are; this variable
13766must first be set to 0 and then incremented each time Emacs goes
13767around the @code{while} loop. The incrementing expression is simply:
13768
13769@smallexample
13770(setq count (1+ count))
13771@end smallexample
13772
13773Finally, we want to tell the user how many words there are in the
13774region. The @code{message} function is intended for presenting this
13775kind of information to the user. The message has to be phrased so
13776that it reads properly regardless of how many words there are in the
13777region: we don't want to say that ``there are 1 words in the region''.
13778The conflict between singular and plural is ungrammatical. We can
13779solve this problem by using a conditional expression that evaluates
13780different messages depending on the number of words in the region.
13781There are three possibilities: no words in the region, one word in the
13782region, and more than one word. This means that the @code{cond}
13783special form is appropriate.
13784
13785@need 1500
13786All this leads to the following function definition:
13787
13788@smallexample
13789@group
13790;;; @r{First version; has bugs!}
ea4f7750 13791(defun @value{COUNT-WORDS} (beginning end)
8cda6f8f
GM
13792 "Print number of words in the region.
13793Words are defined as at least one word-constituent
13794character followed by at least one character that
13795is not a word-constituent. The buffer's syntax
13796table determines which characters these are."
13797 (interactive "r")
13798 (message "Counting words in region ... ")
13799@end group
13800
13801@group
13802;;; @r{1. Set up appropriate conditions.}
13803 (save-excursion
13804 (goto-char beginning)
13805 (let ((count 0))
13806@end group
13807
13808@group
13809;;; @r{2. Run the} while @r{loop.}
13810 (while (< (point) end)
13811 (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*")
13812 (setq count (1+ count)))
13813@end group
13814
13815@group
13816;;; @r{3. Send a message to the user.}
13817 (cond ((zerop count)
13818 (message
13819 "The region does NOT have any words."))
13820 ((= 1 count)
13821 (message
13822 "The region has 1 word."))
13823 (t
13824 (message
13825 "The region has %d words." count))))))
13826@end group
13827@end smallexample
13828
13829@noindent
13830As written, the function works, but not in all circumstances.
13831
d6adf7e7 13832@node Whitespace Bug
ea4f7750 13833@subsection The Whitespace Bug in @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f 13834
ea4f7750 13835The @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} command described in the preceding
8cda6f8f
GM
13836section has two bugs, or rather, one bug with two manifestations.
13837First, if you mark a region containing only whitespace in the middle
ea4f7750 13838of some text, the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} command tells you that the
8cda6f8f
GM
13839region contains one word! Second, if you mark a region containing
13840only whitespace at the end of the buffer or the accessible portion of
13841a narrowed buffer, the command displays an error message that looks
13842like this:
13843
13844@smallexample
13845Search failed: "\\w+\\W*"
13846@end smallexample
13847
13848If you are reading this in Info in GNU Emacs, you can test for these
13849bugs yourself.
13850
13851First, evaluate the function in the usual manner to install it.
13852@ifinfo
13853Here is a copy of the definition. Place your cursor after the closing
13854parenthesis and type @kbd{C-x C-e} to install it.
13855
13856@smallexample
13857@group
13858;; @r{First version; has bugs!}
ea4f7750 13859(defun @value{COUNT-WORDS} (beginning end)
8cda6f8f
GM
13860 "Print number of words in the region.
13861Words are defined as at least one word-constituent character followed
13862by at least one character that is not a word-constituent. The buffer's
13863syntax table determines which characters these are."
13864@end group
13865@group
13866 (interactive "r")
13867 (message "Counting words in region ... ")
13868@end group
13869
13870@group
13871;;; @r{1. Set up appropriate conditions.}
13872 (save-excursion
13873 (goto-char beginning)
13874 (let ((count 0))
13875@end group
13876
13877@group
13878;;; @r{2. Run the} while @r{loop.}
13879 (while (< (point) end)
13880 (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*")
13881 (setq count (1+ count)))
13882@end group
13883
13884@group
13885;;; @r{3. Send a message to the user.}
13886 (cond ((zerop count)
13887 (message "The region does NOT have any words."))
13888 ((= 1 count) (message "The region has 1 word."))
13889 (t (message "The region has %d words." count))))))
13890@end group
13891@end smallexample
13892@end ifinfo
13893
13894@need 1000
13895If you wish, you can also install this keybinding by evaluating it:
13896
13897@smallexample
ea4f7750 13898(global-set-key "\C-c=" '@value{COUNT-WORDS})
8cda6f8f
GM
13899@end smallexample
13900
13901To conduct the first test, set mark and point to the beginning and end
13902of the following line and then type @kbd{C-c =} (or @kbd{M-x
ea4f7750 13903@value{COUNT-WORDS}} if you have not bound @kbd{C-c =}):
8cda6f8f
GM
13904
13905@smallexample
13906 one two three
13907@end smallexample
13908
13909@noindent
13910Emacs will tell you, correctly, that the region has three words.
13911
13912Repeat the test, but place mark at the beginning of the line and place
13913point just @emph{before} the word @samp{one}. Again type the command
ea4f7750 13914@kbd{C-c =} (or @kbd{M-x @value{COUNT-WORDS}}). Emacs should tell you
8cda6f8f
GM
13915that the region has no words, since it is composed only of the
13916whitespace at the beginning of the line. But instead Emacs tells you
13917that the region has one word!
13918
13919For the third test, copy the sample line to the end of the
13920@file{*scratch*} buffer and then type several spaces at the end of the
13921line. Place mark right after the word @samp{three} and point at the
13922end of line. (The end of the line will be the end of the buffer.)
ea4f7750 13923Type @kbd{C-c =} (or @kbd{M-x @value{COUNT-WORDS}}) as you did before.
8cda6f8f
GM
13924Again, Emacs should tell you that the region has no words, since it is
13925composed only of the whitespace at the end of the line. Instead,
13926Emacs displays an error message saying @samp{Search failed}.
13927
13928The two bugs stem from the same problem.
13929
13930Consider the first manifestation of the bug, in which the command
13931tells you that the whitespace at the beginning of the line contains
ea4f7750 13932one word. What happens is this: The @code{M-x @value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f
GM
13933command moves point to the beginning of the region. The @code{while}
13934tests whether the value of point is smaller than the value of
13935@code{end}, which it is. Consequently, the regular expression search
13936looks for and finds the first word. It leaves point after the word.
13937@code{count} is set to one. The @code{while} loop repeats; but this
13938time the value of point is larger than the value of @code{end}, the
13939loop is exited; and the function displays a message saying the number
13940of words in the region is one. In brief, the regular expression
13941search looks for and finds the word even though it is outside
13942the marked region.
13943
13944In the second manifestation of the bug, the region is whitespace at
13945the end of the buffer. Emacs says @samp{Search failed}. What happens
13946is that the true-or-false-test in the @code{while} loop tests true, so
13947the search expression is executed. But since there are no more words
13948in the buffer, the search fails.
13949
13950In both manifestations of the bug, the search extends or attempts to
13951extend outside of the region.
13952
13953The solution is to limit the search to the region---this is a fairly
13954simple action, but as you may have come to expect, it is not quite as
13955simple as you might think.
13956
13957As we have seen, the @code{re-search-forward} function takes a search
13958pattern as its first argument. But in addition to this first,
13959mandatory argument, it accepts three optional arguments. The optional
13960second argument bounds the search. The optional third argument, if
13961@code{t}, causes the function to return @code{nil} rather than signal
13962an error if the search fails. The optional fourth argument is a
13963repeat count. (In Emacs, you can see a function's documentation by
13964typing @kbd{C-h f}, the name of the function, and then @key{RET}.)
13965
ea4f7750 13966In the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} definition, the value of the end of
8cda6f8f
GM
13967the region is held by the variable @code{end} which is passed as an
13968argument to the function. Thus, we can add @code{end} as an argument
13969to the regular expression search expression:
13970
13971@smallexample
13972(re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" end)
13973@end smallexample
13974
ea4f7750 13975However, if you make only this change to the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f
GM
13976definition and then test the new version of the definition on a
13977stretch of whitespace, you will receive an error message saying
13978@samp{Search failed}.
13979
13980What happens is this: the search is limited to the region, and fails
13981as you expect because there are no word-constituent characters in the
13982region. Since it fails, we receive an error message. But we do not
13983want to receive an error message in this case; we want to receive the
13984message that "The region does NOT have any words."
13985
13986The solution to this problem is to provide @code{re-search-forward}
13987with a third argument of @code{t}, which causes the function to return
13988@code{nil} rather than signal an error if the search fails.
13989
13990However, if you make this change and try it, you will see the message
13991``Counting words in region ... '' and @dots{} you will keep on seeing
13992that message @dots{}, until you type @kbd{C-g} (@code{keyboard-quit}).
13993
13994Here is what happens: the search is limited to the region, as before,
13995and it fails because there are no word-constituent characters in the
13996region, as expected. Consequently, the @code{re-search-forward}
13997expression returns @code{nil}. It does nothing else. In particular,
13998it does not move point, which it does as a side effect if it finds the
13999search target. After the @code{re-search-forward} expression returns
14000@code{nil}, the next expression in the @code{while} loop is evaluated.
14001This expression increments the count. Then the loop repeats. The
14002true-or-false-test tests true because the value of point is still less
14003than the value of end, since the @code{re-search-forward} expression
14004did not move point. @dots{} and the cycle repeats @dots{}
14005
ea4f7750 14006The @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} definition requires yet another
8cda6f8f
GM
14007modification, to cause the true-or-false-test of the @code{while} loop
14008to test false if the search fails. Put another way, there are two
14009conditions that must be satisfied in the true-or-false-test before the
14010word count variable is incremented: point must still be within the
14011region and the search expression must have found a word to count.
14012
14013Since both the first condition and the second condition must be true
14014together, the two expressions, the region test and the search
14015expression, can be joined with an @code{and} special form and embedded in
14016the @code{while} loop as the true-or-false-test, like this:
14017
14018@smallexample
14019(and (< (point) end) (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" end t))
14020@end smallexample
14021
14022@c colon in printed section title causes problem in Info cross reference
14023@c also trouble with an overfull hbox
14024@iftex
14025@noindent
14026(For information about @code{and}, see
14027@ref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new} function}.)
14028@end iftex
14029@ifinfo
14030@noindent
14031(@xref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new} function}, for
14032information about @code{and}.)
14033@end ifinfo
14034
14035The @code{re-search-forward} expression returns @code{t} if the search
14036succeeds and as a side effect moves point. Consequently, as words are
14037found, point is moved through the region. When the search expression
14038fails to find another word, or when point reaches the end of the
14039region, the true-or-false-test tests false, the @code{while} loop
ea4f7750 14040exits, and the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} function displays one or
8cda6f8f
GM
14041other of its messages.
14042
ea4f7750 14043After incorporating these final changes, the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f
GM
14044works without bugs (or at least, without bugs that I have found!).
14045Here is what it looks like:
14046
14047@smallexample
14048@group
14049;;; @r{Final version:} @code{while}
ea4f7750 14050(defun @value{COUNT-WORDS} (beginning end)
8cda6f8f
GM
14051 "Print number of words in the region."
14052 (interactive "r")
14053 (message "Counting words in region ... ")
14054@end group
14055
14056@group
14057;;; @r{1. Set up appropriate conditions.}
14058 (save-excursion
14059 (let ((count 0))
14060 (goto-char beginning)
14061@end group
14062
14063@group
14064;;; @r{2. Run the} while @r{loop.}
14065 (while (and (< (point) end)
14066 (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" end t))
14067 (setq count (1+ count)))
14068@end group
14069
14070@group
14071;;; @r{3. Send a message to the user.}
14072 (cond ((zerop count)
14073 (message
14074 "The region does NOT have any words."))
14075 ((= 1 count)
14076 (message
14077 "The region has 1 word."))
14078 (t
14079 (message
14080 "The region has %d words." count))))))
14081@end group
14082@end smallexample
14083
d6adf7e7 14084@node recursive-count-words
8cda6f8f
GM
14085@section Count Words Recursively
14086@cindex Count words recursively
14087@cindex Recursively counting words
14088@cindex Words, counted recursively
14089
14090You can write the function for counting words recursively as well as
14091with a @code{while} loop. Let's see how this is done.
14092
ea4f7750 14093First, we need to recognize that the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f
GM
14094function has three jobs: it sets up the appropriate conditions for
14095counting to occur; it counts the words in the region; and it sends a
14096message to the user telling how many words there are.
14097
14098If we write a single recursive function to do everything, we will
14099receive a message for every recursive call. If the region contains 13
14100words, we will receive thirteen messages, one right after the other.
14101We don't want this! Instead, we must write two functions to do the
14102job, one of which (the recursive function) will be used inside of the
14103other. One function will set up the conditions and display the
14104message; the other will return the word count.
14105
14106Let us start with the function that causes the message to be displayed.
ea4f7750 14107We can continue to call this @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
8cda6f8f
GM
14108
14109This is the function that the user will call. It will be interactive.
14110Indeed, it will be similar to our previous versions of this
14111function, except that it will call @code{recursive-count-words} to
14112determine how many words are in the region.
14113
14114@need 1250
14115We can readily construct a template for this function, based on our
14116previous versions:
14117
14118@smallexample
14119@group
14120;; @r{Recursive version; uses regular expression search}
ea4f7750 14121(defun @value{COUNT-WORDS} (beginning end)
8cda6f8f
GM
14122 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
14123 (@var{interactive-expression}@dots{})
14124@end group
14125@group
14126
14127;;; @r{1. Set up appropriate conditions.}
14128 (@var{explanatory message})
14129 (@var{set-up functions}@dots{}
14130@end group
14131@group
14132
14133;;; @r{2. Count the words.}
14134 @var{recursive call}
14135@end group
14136@group
14137
14138;;; @r{3. Send a message to the user.}
14139 @var{message providing word count}))
14140@end group
14141@end smallexample
14142
14143The definition looks straightforward, except that somehow the count
14144returned by the recursive call must be passed to the message
14145displaying the word count. A little thought suggests that this can be
14146done by making use of a @code{let} expression: we can bind a variable
14147in the varlist of a @code{let} expression to the number of words in
14148the region, as returned by the recursive call; and then the
14149@code{cond} expression, using binding, can display the value to the
14150user.
14151
14152Often, one thinks of the binding within a @code{let} expression as
14153somehow secondary to the `primary' work of a function. But in this
14154case, what you might consider the `primary' job of the function,
14155counting words, is done within the @code{let} expression.
14156
14157@need 1250
14158Using @code{let}, the function definition looks like this:
14159
14160@smallexample
14161@group
ea4f7750 14162(defun @value{COUNT-WORDS} (beginning end)
8cda6f8f
GM
14163 "Print number of words in the region."
14164 (interactive "r")
14165@end group
14166
14167@group
14168;;; @r{1. Set up appropriate conditions.}
14169 (message "Counting words in region ... ")
14170 (save-excursion
14171 (goto-char beginning)
14172@end group
14173
14174@group
14175;;; @r{2. Count the words.}
14176 (let ((count (recursive-count-words end)))
14177@end group
14178
14179@group
14180;;; @r{3. Send a message to the user.}
14181 (cond ((zerop count)
14182 (message
14183 "The region does NOT have any words."))
14184 ((= 1 count)
14185 (message
14186 "The region has 1 word."))
14187 (t
14188 (message
14189 "The region has %d words." count))))))
14190@end group
14191@end smallexample
14192
14193Next, we need to write the recursive counting function.
14194
14195A recursive function has at least three parts: the `do-again-test', the
14196`next-step-expression', and the recursive call.
14197
14198The do-again-test determines whether the function will or will not be
14199called again. Since we are counting words in a region and can use a
14200function that moves point forward for every word, the do-again-test
14201can check whether point is still within the region. The do-again-test
14202should find the value of point and determine whether point is before,
14203at, or after the value of the end of the region. We can use the
14204@code{point} function to locate point. Clearly, we must pass the
14205value of the end of the region to the recursive counting function as an
14206argument.
14207
14208In addition, the do-again-test should also test whether the search finds a
14209word. If it does not, the function should not call itself again.
14210
14211The next-step-expression changes a value so that when the recursive
14212function is supposed to stop calling itself, it stops. More
14213precisely, the next-step-expression changes a value so that at the
14214right time, the do-again-test stops the recursive function from
14215calling itself again. In this case, the next-step-expression can be
14216the expression that moves point forward, word by word.
14217
14218The third part of a recursive function is the recursive call.
14219
14220Somewhere, also, we also need a part that does the `work' of the
14221function, a part that does the counting. A vital part!
14222
14223@need 1250
14224But already, we have an outline of the recursive counting function:
14225
14226@smallexample
14227@group
14228(defun recursive-count-words (region-end)
14229 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
14230 @var{do-again-test}
14231 @var{next-step-expression}
14232 @var{recursive call})
14233@end group
14234@end smallexample
14235
14236Now we need to fill in the slots. Let's start with the simplest cases
14237first: if point is at or beyond the end of the region, there cannot
14238be any words in the region, so the function should return zero.
14239Likewise, if the search fails, there are no words to count, so the
14240function should return zero.
14241
14242On the other hand, if point is within the region and the search
14243succeeds, the function should call itself again.
14244
14245@need 800
14246Thus, the do-again-test should look like this:
14247
14248@smallexample
14249@group
14250(and (< (point) region-end)
14251 (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" region-end t))
14252@end group
14253@end smallexample
14254
14255Note that the search expression is part of the do-again-test---the
14256function returns @code{t} if its search succeeds and @code{nil} if it
14257fails. (@xref{Whitespace Bug, , The Whitespace Bug in
ea4f7750 14258@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}}, for an explanation of how
8cda6f8f
GM
14259@code{re-search-forward} works.)
14260
14261The do-again-test is the true-or-false test of an @code{if} clause.
14262Clearly, if the do-again-test succeeds, the then-part of the @code{if}
14263clause should call the function again; but if it fails, the else-part
14264should return zero since either point is outside the region or the
14265search failed because there were no words to find.
14266
14267But before considering the recursive call, we need to consider the
14268next-step-expression. What is it? Interestingly, it is the search
14269part of the do-again-test.
14270
14271In addition to returning @code{t} or @code{nil} for the
14272do-again-test, @code{re-search-forward} moves point forward as a side
14273effect of a successful search. This is the action that changes the
14274value of point so that the recursive function stops calling itself
14275when point completes its movement through the region. Consequently,
14276the @code{re-search-forward} expression is the next-step-expression.
14277
14278@need 1200
14279In outline, then, the body of the @code{recursive-count-words}
14280function looks like this:
14281
14282@smallexample
14283@group
14284(if @var{do-again-test-and-next-step-combined}
14285 ;; @r{then}
14286 @var{recursive-call-returning-count}
14287 ;; @r{else}
14288 @var{return-zero})
14289@end group
14290@end smallexample
14291
14292How to incorporate the mechanism that counts?
14293
14294If you are not used to writing recursive functions, a question like
14295this can be troublesome. But it can and should be approached
14296systematically.
14297
14298We know that the counting mechanism should be associated in some way
14299with the recursive call. Indeed, since the next-step-expression moves
14300point forward by one word, and since a recursive call is made for
14301each word, the counting mechanism must be an expression that adds one
14302to the value returned by a call to @code{recursive-count-words}.
14303
14304@need 800
14305Consider several cases:
14306
14307@itemize @bullet
14308@item
14309If there are two words in the region, the function should return
14310a value resulting from adding one to the value returned when it counts
14311the first word, plus the number returned when it counts the remaining
14312words in the region, which in this case is one.
14313
14314@item
14315If there is one word in the region, the function should return
14316a value resulting from adding one to the value returned when it counts
14317that word, plus the number returned when it counts the remaining
14318words in the region, which in this case is zero.
14319
14320@item
14321If there are no words in the region, the function should return zero.
14322@end itemize
14323
14324From the sketch we can see that the else-part of the @code{if} returns
14325zero for the case of no words. This means that the then-part of the
14326@code{if} must return a value resulting from adding one to the value
14327returned from a count of the remaining words.
14328
14329@need 1200
14330The expression will look like this, where @code{1+} is a function that
14331adds one to its argument.
14332
14333@smallexample
14334(1+ (recursive-count-words region-end))
14335@end smallexample
14336
14337@need 1200
14338The whole @code{recursive-count-words} function will then look like
14339this:
14340
14341@smallexample
14342@group
14343(defun recursive-count-words (region-end)
14344 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
14345
14346;;; @r{1. do-again-test}
14347 (if (and (< (point) region-end)
14348 (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" region-end t))
14349@end group
14350
14351@group
14352;;; @r{2. then-part: the recursive call}
14353 (1+ (recursive-count-words region-end))
14354
14355;;; @r{3. else-part}
14356 0))
14357@end group
14358@end smallexample
14359
14360@need 1250
14361Let's examine how this works:
14362
14363If there are no words in the region, the else part of the @code{if}
14364expression is evaluated and consequently the function returns zero.
14365
14366If there is one word in the region, the value of point is less than
14367the value of @code{region-end} and the search succeeds. In this case,
14368the true-or-false-test of the @code{if} expression tests true, and the
14369then-part of the @code{if} expression is evaluated. The counting
14370expression is evaluated. This expression returns a value (which will
14371be the value returned by the whole function) that is the sum of one
14372added to the value returned by a recursive call.
14373
14374Meanwhile, the next-step-expression has caused point to jump over the
14375first (and in this case only) word in the region. This means that
14376when @code{(recursive-count-words region-end)} is evaluated a second
14377time, as a result of the recursive call, the value of point will be
14378equal to or greater than the value of region end. So this time,
14379@code{recursive-count-words} will return zero. The zero will be added
14380to one, and the original evaluation of @code{recursive-count-words}
14381will return one plus zero, which is one, which is the correct amount.
14382
14383Clearly, if there are two words in the region, the first call to
14384@code{recursive-count-words} returns one added to the value returned
14385by calling @code{recursive-count-words} on a region containing the
14386remaining word---that is, it adds one to one, producing two, which is
14387the correct amount.
14388
14389Similarly, if there are three words in the region, the first call to
14390@code{recursive-count-words} returns one added to the value returned
14391by calling @code{recursive-count-words} on a region containing the
14392remaining two words---and so on and so on.
14393
14394@need 1250
14395@noindent
14396With full documentation the two functions look like this:
14397
14398@need 1250
14399@noindent
14400The recursive function:
14401
14402@findex recursive-count-words
14403@smallexample
14404@group
14405(defun recursive-count-words (region-end)
14406 "Number of words between point and REGION-END."
14407@end group
14408
14409@group
14410;;; @r{1. do-again-test}
14411 (if (and (< (point) region-end)
14412 (re-search-forward "\\w+\\W*" region-end t))
14413@end group
14414
14415@group
14416;;; @r{2. then-part: the recursive call}
14417 (1+ (recursive-count-words region-end))
14418
14419;;; @r{3. else-part}
14420 0))
14421@end group
14422@end smallexample
14423
14424@need 800
14425@noindent
14426The wrapper:
14427
14428@smallexample
14429@group
14430;;; @r{Recursive version}
ea4f7750 14431(defun @value{COUNT-WORDS} (beginning end)
8cda6f8f
GM
14432 "Print number of words in the region.
14433@end group
14434
14435@group
14436Words are defined as at least one word-constituent
14437character followed by at least one character that is
14438not a word-constituent. The buffer's syntax table
14439determines which characters these are."
14440@end group
14441@group
14442 (interactive "r")
14443 (message "Counting words in region ... ")
14444 (save-excursion
14445 (goto-char beginning)
14446 (let ((count (recursive-count-words end)))
14447@end group
14448@group
14449 (cond ((zerop count)
14450 (message
14451 "The region does NOT have any words."))
14452@end group
14453@group
14454 ((= 1 count)
14455 (message "The region has 1 word."))
14456 (t
14457 (message
14458 "The region has %d words." count))))))
14459@end group
14460@end smallexample
14461
d6adf7e7 14462@node Counting Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
14463@section Exercise: Counting Punctuation
14464
14465Using a @code{while} loop, write a function to count the number of
14466punctuation marks in a region---period, comma, semicolon, colon,
14467exclamation mark, and question mark. Do the same using recursion.
14468
d6adf7e7 14469@node Words in a defun
8cda6f8f
GM
14470@chapter Counting Words in a @code{defun}
14471@cindex Counting words in a @code{defun}
14472@cindex Word counting in a @code{defun}
14473
14474Our next project is to count the number of words in a function
14475definition. Clearly, this can be done using some variant of
ea4f7750 14476@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}. @xref{Counting Words, , Counting Words:
8cda6f8f
GM
14477Repetition and Regexps}. If we are just going to count the words in
14478one definition, it is easy enough to mark the definition with the
14479@kbd{C-M-h} (@code{mark-defun}) command, and then call
ea4f7750 14480@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
8cda6f8f
GM
14481
14482However, I am more ambitious: I want to count the words and symbols in
14483every definition in the Emacs sources and then print a graph that
14484shows how many functions there are of each length: how many contain 40
14485to 49 words or symbols, how many contain 50 to 59 words or symbols,
14486and so on. I have often been curious how long a typical function is,
14487and this will tell.
14488
14489@menu
14490* Divide and Conquer::
14491* Words and Symbols:: What to count?
14492* Syntax:: What constitutes a word or symbol?
ea4f7750 14493* count-words-in-defun:: Very like @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}.
8cda6f8f
GM
14494* Several defuns:: Counting several defuns in a file.
14495* Find a File:: Do you want to look at a file?
14496* lengths-list-file:: A list of the lengths of many definitions.
14497* Several files:: Counting in definitions in different files.
14498* Several files recursively:: Recursively counting in different files.
14499* Prepare the data:: Prepare the data for display in a graph.
14500@end menu
14501
8cda6f8f 14502@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 14503@node Divide and Conquer
8cda6f8f
GM
14504@unnumberedsec Divide and Conquer
14505@end ifnottex
14506
14507Described in one phrase, the histogram project is daunting; but
14508divided into numerous small steps, each of which we can take one at a
14509time, the project becomes less fearsome. Let us consider what the
14510steps must be:
14511
14512@itemize @bullet
14513@item
14514First, write a function to count the words in one definition. This
14515includes the problem of handling symbols as well as words.
14516
14517@item
14518Second, write a function to list the numbers of words in each function
14519in a file. This function can use the @code{count-words-in-defun}
14520function.
14521
14522@item
14523Third, write a function to list the numbers of words in each function
14524in each of several files. This entails automatically finding the
14525various files, switching to them, and counting the words in the
14526definitions within them.
14527
14528@item
14529Fourth, write a function to convert the list of numbers that we
14530created in step three to a form that will be suitable for printing as
14531a graph.
14532
14533@item
14534Fifth, write a function to print the results as a graph.
14535@end itemize
14536
14537This is quite a project! But if we take each step slowly, it will not
14538be difficult.
14539
d6adf7e7 14540@node Words and Symbols
8cda6f8f
GM
14541@section What to Count?
14542@cindex Words and symbols in defun
14543
14544When we first start thinking about how to count the words in a
14545function definition, the first question is (or ought to be) what are
14546we going to count? When we speak of `words' with respect to a Lisp
14547function definition, we are actually speaking, in large part, of
14548`symbols'. For example, the following @code{multiply-by-seven}
14549function contains the five symbols @code{defun},
14550@code{multiply-by-seven}, @code{number}, @code{*}, and @code{7}. In
14551addition, in the documentation string, it contains the four words
14552@samp{Multiply}, @samp{NUMBER}, @samp{by}, and @samp{seven}. The
14553symbol @samp{number} is repeated, so the definition contains a total
14554of ten words and symbols.
14555
14556@smallexample
14557@group
14558(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
14559 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
14560 (* 7 number))
14561@end group
14562@end smallexample
14563
14564@noindent
14565However, if we mark the @code{multiply-by-seven} definition with
14566@kbd{C-M-h} (@code{mark-defun}), and then call
ea4f7750
GM
14567@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} on it, we will find that
14568@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} claims the definition has eleven words, not
8cda6f8f
GM
14569ten! Something is wrong!
14570
ea4f7750 14571The problem is twofold: @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} does not count the
8cda6f8f
GM
14572@samp{*} as a word, and it counts the single symbol,
14573@code{multiply-by-seven}, as containing three words. The hyphens are
14574treated as if they were interword spaces rather than intraword
14575connectors: @samp{multiply-by-seven} is counted as if it were written
14576@samp{multiply by seven}.
14577
14578The cause of this confusion is the regular expression search within
ea4f7750
GM
14579the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} definition that moves point forward word
14580by word. In the canonical version of @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}, the
8cda6f8f
GM
14581regexp is:
14582
14583@smallexample
14584"\\w+\\W*"
14585@end smallexample
14586
14587@noindent
14588This regular expression is a pattern defining one or more word
14589constituent characters possibly followed by one or more characters
14590that are not word constituents. What is meant by `word constituent
14591characters' brings us to the issue of syntax, which is worth a section
14592of its own.
14593
d6adf7e7 14594@node Syntax
8cda6f8f
GM
14595@section What Constitutes a Word or Symbol?
14596@cindex Syntax categories and tables
14597
14598Emacs treats different characters as belonging to different
14599@dfn{syntax categories}. For example, the regular expression,
14600@samp{\\w+}, is a pattern specifying one or more @emph{word
14601constituent} characters. Word constituent characters are members of
14602one syntax category. Other syntax categories include the class of
14603punctuation characters, such as the period and the comma, and the
14604class of whitespace characters, such as the blank space and the tab
0fd2c9a3 14605character. (For more information, @pxref{Syntax Tables, , Syntax
8cda6f8f
GM
14606Tables, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.)
14607
14608Syntax tables specify which characters belong to which categories.
14609Usually, a hyphen is not specified as a `word constituent character'.
14610Instead, it is specified as being in the `class of characters that are
14611part of symbol names but not words.' This means that the
ea4f7750
GM
14612@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} function treats it in the same way it treats
14613an interword white space, which is why @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}
8cda6f8f
GM
14614counts @samp{multiply-by-seven} as three words.
14615
14616There are two ways to cause Emacs to count @samp{multiply-by-seven} as
14617one symbol: modify the syntax table or modify the regular expression.
14618
14619We could redefine a hyphen as a word constituent character by
14620modifying the syntax table that Emacs keeps for each mode. This
14621action would serve our purpose, except that a hyphen is merely the
14622most common character within symbols that is not typically a word
14623constituent character; there are others, too.
14624
52af8e0a 14625Alternatively, we can redefine the regexp used in the
ea4f7750 14626@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} definition so as to include symbols. This
8cda6f8f
GM
14627procedure has the merit of clarity, but the task is a little tricky.
14628
14629@need 1200
14630The first part is simple enough: the pattern must match ``at least one
14631character that is a word or symbol constituent''. Thus:
14632
14633@smallexample
14634"\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+"
14635@end smallexample
14636
14637@noindent
14638The @samp{\\(} is the first part of the grouping construct that
14639includes the @samp{\\w} and the @samp{\\s_} as alternatives, separated
14640by the @samp{\\|}. The @samp{\\w} matches any word-constituent
14641character and the @samp{\\s_} matches any character that is part of a
14642symbol name but not a word-constituent character. The @samp{+}
14643following the group indicates that the word or symbol constituent
14644characters must be matched at least once.
14645
14646However, the second part of the regexp is more difficult to design.
14647What we want is to follow the first part with ``optionally one or more
14648characters that are not constituents of a word or symbol''. At first,
14649I thought I could define this with the following:
14650
14651@smallexample
14652"\\(\\W\\|\\S_\\)*"
14653@end smallexample
14654
14655@noindent
14656The upper case @samp{W} and @samp{S} match characters that are
14657@emph{not} word or symbol constituents. Unfortunately, this
14658expression matches any character that is either not a word constituent
14659or not a symbol constituent. This matches any character!
14660
14661I then noticed that every word or symbol in my test region was
14662followed by white space (blank space, tab, or newline). So I tried
14663placing a pattern to match one or more blank spaces after the pattern
14664for one or more word or symbol constituents. This failed, too. Words
14665and symbols are often separated by whitespace, but in actual code
14666parentheses may follow symbols and punctuation may follow words. So
14667finally, I designed a pattern in which the word or symbol constituents
14668are followed optionally by characters that are not white space and
14669then followed optionally by white space.
14670
14671@need 800
14672Here is the full regular expression:
14673
14674@smallexample
14675"\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*"
14676@end smallexample
14677
d6adf7e7 14678@node count-words-in-defun
8cda6f8f
GM
14679@section The @code{count-words-in-defun} Function
14680@cindex Counting words in a @code{defun}
14681
14682We have seen that there are several ways to write a
ea4f7750 14683@code{count-words-region} function. To write a
8cda6f8f
GM
14684@code{count-words-in-defun}, we need merely adapt one of these
14685versions.
14686
14687The version that uses a @code{while} loop is easy to understand, so I
14688am going to adapt that. Because @code{count-words-in-defun} will be
14689part of a more complex program, it need not be interactive and it need
14690not display a message but just return the count. These considerations
14691simplify the definition a little.
14692
14693On the other hand, @code{count-words-in-defun} will be used within a
14694buffer that contains function definitions. Consequently, it is
14695reasonable to ask that the function determine whether it is called
14696when point is within a function definition, and if it is, to return
14697the count for that definition. This adds complexity to the
14698definition, but saves us from needing to pass arguments to the
14699function.
14700
14701@need 1250
14702These considerations lead us to prepare the following template:
14703
14704@smallexample
14705@group
14706(defun count-words-in-defun ()
14707 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
14708 (@var{set up}@dots{}
14709 (@var{while loop}@dots{})
14710 @var{return count})
14711@end group
14712@end smallexample
14713
14714@noindent
14715As usual, our job is to fill in the slots.
14716
14717First, the set up.
14718
14719We are presuming that this function will be called within a buffer
14720containing function definitions. Point will either be within a
14721function definition or not. For @code{count-words-in-defun} to work,
14722point must move to the beginning of the definition, a counter must
14723start at zero, and the counting loop must stop when point reaches the
14724end of the definition.
14725
14726The @code{beginning-of-defun} function searches backwards for an
14727opening delimiter such as a @samp{(} at the beginning of a line, and
14728moves point to that position, or else to the limit of the search. In
14729practice, this means that @code{beginning-of-defun} moves point to the
14730beginning of an enclosing or preceding function definition, or else to
14731the beginning of the buffer. We can use @code{beginning-of-defun} to
14732place point where we wish to start.
14733
14734The @code{while} loop requires a counter to keep track of the words or
14735symbols being counted. A @code{let} expression can be used to create
14736a local variable for this purpose, and bind it to an initial value of zero.
14737
14738The @code{end-of-defun} function works like @code{beginning-of-defun}
14739except that it moves point to the end of the definition.
14740@code{end-of-defun} can be used as part of an expression that
14741determines the position of the end of the definition.
14742
14743The set up for @code{count-words-in-defun} takes shape rapidly: first
14744we move point to the beginning of the definition, then we create a
14745local variable to hold the count, and finally, we record the position
14746of the end of the definition so the @code{while} loop will know when to stop
14747looping.
14748
14749@need 1250
14750The code looks like this:
14751
14752@smallexample
14753@group
14754(beginning-of-defun)
14755(let ((count 0)
14756 (end (save-excursion (end-of-defun) (point))))
14757@end group
14758@end smallexample
14759
14760@noindent
14761The code is simple. The only slight complication is likely to concern
14762@code{end}: it is bound to the position of the end of the definition
14763by a @code{save-excursion} expression that returns the value of point
14764after @code{end-of-defun} temporarily moves it to the end of the
14765definition.
14766
14767The second part of the @code{count-words-in-defun}, after the set up,
14768is the @code{while} loop.
14769
14770The loop must contain an expression that jumps point forward word by
14771word and symbol by symbol, and another expression that counts the
14772jumps. The true-or-false-test for the @code{while} loop should test
14773true so long as point should jump forward, and false when point is at
14774the end of the definition. We have already redefined the regular
0fd2c9a3 14775expression for this, so the loop is straightforward:
8cda6f8f
GM
14776
14777@smallexample
14778@group
14779(while (and (< (point) end)
14780 (re-search-forward
1ef17681 14781 "\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*" end t))
8cda6f8f
GM
14782 (setq count (1+ count)))
14783@end group
14784@end smallexample
14785
14786The third part of the function definition returns the count of words
14787and symbols. This part is the last expression within the body of the
14788@code{let} expression, and can be, very simply, the local variable
14789@code{count}, which when evaluated returns the count.
14790
14791@need 1250
14792Put together, the @code{count-words-in-defun} definition looks like this:
14793
14794@findex count-words-in-defun
14795@smallexample
14796@group
14797(defun count-words-in-defun ()
14798 "Return the number of words and symbols in a defun."
14799 (beginning-of-defun)
14800 (let ((count 0)
14801 (end (save-excursion (end-of-defun) (point))))
14802@end group
14803@group
14804 (while
14805 (and (< (point) end)
14806 (re-search-forward
14807 "\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*"
14808 end t))
14809 (setq count (1+ count)))
14810 count))
14811@end group
14812@end smallexample
14813
14814How to test this? The function is not interactive, but it is easy to
14815put a wrapper around the function to make it interactive; we can use
14816almost the same code as for the recursive version of
ea4f7750 14817@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}}:
8cda6f8f
GM
14818
14819@smallexample
14820@group
14821;;; @r{Interactive version.}
14822(defun count-words-defun ()
14823 "Number of words and symbols in a function definition."
14824 (interactive)
14825 (message
14826 "Counting words and symbols in function definition ... ")
14827@end group
14828@group
14829 (let ((count (count-words-in-defun)))
14830 (cond
14831 ((zerop count)
14832 (message
14833 "The definition does NOT have any words or symbols."))
14834@end group
14835@group
14836 ((= 1 count)
14837 (message
14838 "The definition has 1 word or symbol."))
14839 (t
14840 (message
14841 "The definition has %d words or symbols." count)))))
14842@end group
14843@end smallexample
14844
14845@need 800
14846@noindent
14847Let's re-use @kbd{C-c =} as a convenient keybinding:
14848
14849@smallexample
14850(global-set-key "\C-c=" 'count-words-defun)
14851@end smallexample
14852
14853Now we can try out @code{count-words-defun}: install both
14854@code{count-words-in-defun} and @code{count-words-defun}, and set the
14855keybinding, and then place the cursor within the following definition:
14856
14857@smallexample
14858@group
14859(defun multiply-by-seven (number)
14860 "Multiply NUMBER by seven."
14861 (* 7 number))
14862 @result{} 10
14863@end group
14864@end smallexample
14865
14866@noindent
14867Success! The definition has 10 words and symbols.
14868
14869The next problem is to count the numbers of words and symbols in
14870several definitions within a single file.
14871
d6adf7e7 14872@node Several defuns
8cda6f8f
GM
14873@section Count Several @code{defuns} Within a File
14874
14875A file such as @file{simple.el} may have a hundred or more function
14876definitions within it. Our long term goal is to collect statistics on
14877many files, but as a first step, our immediate goal is to collect
14878statistics on one file.
14879
14880The information will be a series of numbers, each number being the
14881length of a function definition. We can store the numbers in a list.
14882
14883We know that we will want to incorporate the information regarding one
14884file with information about many other files; this means that the
14885function for counting definition lengths within one file need only
14886return the list of lengths. It need not and should not display any
14887messages.
14888
14889The word count commands contain one expression to jump point forward
14890word by word and another expression to count the jumps. The function
14891to return the lengths of definitions can be designed to work the same
14892way, with one expression to jump point forward definition by
14893definition and another expression to construct the lengths' list.
14894
14895This statement of the problem makes it elementary to write the
14896function definition. Clearly, we will start the count at the
14897beginning of the file, so the first command will be @code{(goto-char
14898(point-min))}. Next, we start the @code{while} loop; and the
14899true-or-false test of the loop can be a regular expression search for
14900the next function definition---so long as the search succeeds, point
14901is moved forward and then the body of the loop is evaluated. The body
14902needs an expression that constructs the lengths' list. @code{cons},
14903the list construction command, can be used to create the list. That
14904is almost all there is to it.
14905
14906@need 800
14907Here is what this fragment of code looks like:
14908
14909@smallexample
14910@group
14911(goto-char (point-min))
14912(while (re-search-forward "^(defun" nil t)
14913 (setq lengths-list
14914 (cons (count-words-in-defun) lengths-list)))
14915@end group
14916@end smallexample
14917
14918What we have left out is the mechanism for finding the file that
14919contains the function definitions.
14920
14921In previous examples, we either used this, the Info file, or we
14922switched back and forth to some other buffer, such as the
14923@file{*scratch*} buffer.
14924
14925Finding a file is a new process that we have not yet discussed.
14926
d6adf7e7 14927@node Find a File
8cda6f8f
GM
14928@section Find a File
14929@cindex Find a File
14930
14931To find a file in Emacs, you use the @kbd{C-x C-f} (@code{find-file})
14932command. This command is almost, but not quite right for the lengths
14933problem.
14934
14935@need 1200
14936Let's look at the source for @code{find-file}:
14937
14938@smallexample
14939@group
14940(defun find-file (filename)
14941 "Edit file FILENAME.
14942Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME,
14943creating one if none already exists."
14944 (interactive "FFind file: ")
14945 (switch-to-buffer (find-file-noselect filename)))
14946@end group
14947@end smallexample
14948
14949@noindent
14950(The most recent version of the @code{find-file} function definition
14951permits you to specify optional wildcards to visit multiple files; that
14952makes the definition more complex and we will not discuss it here,
14953since it is not relevant. You can see its source using either
14954@kbd{M-.} (@code{find-tag}) or @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}).)
14955
14956@ignore
14957In Emacs 22
14958(defun find-file (filename &optional wildcards)
14959 "Edit file FILENAME.
14960Switch to a buffer visiting file FILENAME,
14961creating one if none already exists.
14962Interactively, the default if you just type RET is the current directory,
14963but the visited file name is available through the minibuffer history:
14964type M-n to pull it into the minibuffer.
14965
14966Interactively, or if WILDCARDS is non-nil in a call from Lisp,
14967expand wildcards (if any) and visit multiple files. You can
14968suppress wildcard expansion by setting `find-file-wildcards' to nil.
14969
14970To visit a file without any kind of conversion and without
14971automatically choosing a major mode, use \\[find-file-literally]."
14972 (interactive (find-file-read-args "Find file: " nil))
14973 (let ((value (find-file-noselect filename nil nil wildcards)))
14974 (if (listp value)
14975 (mapcar 'switch-to-buffer (nreverse value))
14976 (switch-to-buffer value))))
14977@end ignore
14978
14979The definition I am showing possesses short but complete documentation
14980and an interactive specification that prompts you for a file name when
14981you use the command interactively. The body of the definition
14982contains two functions, @code{find-file-noselect} and
14983@code{switch-to-buffer}.
14984
14985According to its documentation as shown by @kbd{C-h f} (the
14986@code{describe-function} command), the @code{find-file-noselect}
14987function reads the named file into a buffer and returns the buffer.
14988(Its most recent version includes an optional wildcards argument,
14989too, as well as another to read a file literally and an other you
14990suppress warning messages. These optional arguments are irrelevant.)
14991
14992However, the @code{find-file-noselect} function does not select the
14993buffer in which it puts the file. Emacs does not switch its attention
14994(or yours if you are using @code{find-file-noselect}) to the selected
14995buffer. That is what @code{switch-to-buffer} does: it switches the
14996buffer to which Emacs attention is directed; and it switches the
14997buffer displayed in the window to the new buffer. We have discussed
14998buffer switching elsewhere. (@xref{Switching Buffers}.)
14999
15000In this histogram project, we do not need to display each file on the
15001screen as the program determines the length of each definition within
15002it. Instead of employing @code{switch-to-buffer}, we can work with
15003@code{set-buffer}, which redirects the attention of the computer
15004program to a different buffer but does not redisplay it on the screen.
15005So instead of calling on @code{find-file} to do the job, we must write
15006our own expression.
15007
15008The task is easy: use @code{find-file-noselect} and @code{set-buffer}.
15009
d6adf7e7 15010@node lengths-list-file
8cda6f8f
GM
15011@section @code{lengths-list-file} in Detail
15012
15013The core of the @code{lengths-list-file} function is a @code{while}
15014loop containing a function to move point forward `defun by defun' and
15015a function to count the number of words and symbols in each defun.
15016This core must be surrounded by functions that do various other tasks,
15017including finding the file, and ensuring that point starts out at the
15018beginning of the file. The function definition looks like this:
15019@findex lengths-list-file
15020
15021@smallexample
15022@group
15023(defun lengths-list-file (filename)
15024 "Return list of definitions' lengths within FILE.
15025The returned list is a list of numbers.
15026Each number is the number of words or
15027symbols in one function definition."
15028@end group
15029@group
15030 (message "Working on `%s' ... " filename)
15031 (save-excursion
15032 (let ((buffer (find-file-noselect filename))
15033 (lengths-list))
15034 (set-buffer buffer)
15035 (setq buffer-read-only t)
15036 (widen)
15037 (goto-char (point-min))
15038 (while (re-search-forward "^(defun" nil t)
15039 (setq lengths-list
15040 (cons (count-words-in-defun) lengths-list)))
15041 (kill-buffer buffer)
15042 lengths-list)))
15043@end group
15044@end smallexample
15045
15046@noindent
15047The function is passed one argument, the name of the file on which it
15048will work. It has four lines of documentation, but no interactive
15049specification. Since people worry that a computer is broken if they
15050don't see anything going on, the first line of the body is a
15051message.
15052
44e97401 15053The next line contains a @code{save-excursion} that returns Emacs's
8cda6f8f
GM
15054attention to the current buffer when the function completes. This is
15055useful in case you embed this function in another function that
15056presumes point is restored to the original buffer.
15057
15058In the varlist of the @code{let} expression, Emacs finds the file and
15059binds the local variable @code{buffer} to the buffer containing the
15060file. At the same time, Emacs creates @code{lengths-list} as a local
15061variable.
15062
15063Next, Emacs switches its attention to the buffer.
15064
15065In the following line, Emacs makes the buffer read-only. Ideally,
15066this line is not necessary. None of the functions for counting words
15067and symbols in a function definition should change the buffer.
15068Besides, the buffer is not going to be saved, even if it were changed.
15069This line is entirely the consequence of great, perhaps excessive,
15070caution. The reason for the caution is that this function and those
15071it calls work on the sources for Emacs and it is inconvenient if they
15072are inadvertently modified. It goes without saying that I did not
15073realize a need for this line until an experiment went awry and started
15074to modify my Emacs source files @dots{}
15075
15076Next comes a call to widen the buffer if it is narrowed. This
15077function is usually not needed---Emacs creates a fresh buffer if none
15078already exists; but if a buffer visiting the file already exists Emacs
15079returns that one. In this case, the buffer may be narrowed and must
15080be widened. If we wanted to be fully `user-friendly', we would
15081arrange to save the restriction and the location of point, but we
15082won't.
15083
15084The @code{(goto-char (point-min))} expression moves point to the
15085beginning of the buffer.
15086
15087Then comes a @code{while} loop in which the `work' of the function is
15088carried out. In the loop, Emacs determines the length of each
15089definition and constructs a lengths' list containing the information.
15090
15091Emacs kills the buffer after working through it. This is to save
15092space inside of Emacs. My version of GNU Emacs 19 contained over 300
15093source files of interest; GNU Emacs 22 contains over a thousand source
15094files. Another function will apply @code{lengths-list-file} to each
15095of the files.
15096
15097Finally, the last expression within the @code{let} expression is the
15098@code{lengths-list} variable; its value is returned as the value of
15099the whole function.
15100
15101You can try this function by installing it in the usual fashion. Then
15102place your cursor after the following expression and type @kbd{C-x
15103C-e} (@code{eval-last-sexp}).
15104
15105@c !!! 22.1.1 lisp sources location here
15106@smallexample
15107(lengths-list-file
15108 "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/emacs-lisp/debug.el")
15109@end smallexample
15110
15111@noindent
15112(You may need to change the pathname of the file; the one here is for
15113GNU Emacs version 22.1.1. To change the expression, copy it to
15114the @file{*scratch*} buffer and edit it.
15115
15116@need 1200
15117@noindent
15118(Also, to see the full length of the list, rather than a truncated
15119version, you may have to evaluate the following:
15120
15121@smallexample
15122(custom-set-variables '(eval-expression-print-length nil))
15123@end smallexample
15124
15125@noindent
15126(@xref{defcustom, , Specifying Variables using @code{defcustom}}.
15127Then evaluate the @code{lengths-list-file} expression.)
15128
15129@need 1200
15130The lengths' list for @file{debug.el} takes less than a second to
15131produce and looks like this in GNU Emacs 22:
15132
15133@smallexample
15134(83 113 105 144 289 22 30 97 48 89 25 52 52 88 28 29 77 49 43 290 232 587)
15135@end smallexample
15136
15137@need 1500
15138(Using my old machine, the version 19 lengths' list for @file{debug.el}
15139took seven seconds to produce and looked like this:
15140
15141@smallexample
15142(75 41 80 62 20 45 44 68 45 12 34 235)
15143@end smallexample
15144
15145(The newer version of @file{debug.el} contains more defuns than the
15146earlier one; and my new machine is much faster than the old one.)
15147
15148Note that the length of the last definition in the file is first in
15149the list.
15150
d6adf7e7 15151@node Several files
8cda6f8f
GM
15152@section Count Words in @code{defuns} in Different Files
15153
15154In the previous section, we created a function that returns a list of
15155the lengths of each definition in a file. Now, we want to define a
15156function to return a master list of the lengths of the definitions in
15157a list of files.
15158
15159Working on each of a list of files is a repetitious act, so we can use
15160either a @code{while} loop or recursion.
15161
15162@menu
15163* lengths-list-many-files:: Return a list of the lengths of defuns.
15164* append:: Attach one list to another.
15165@end menu
15166
8cda6f8f 15167@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 15168@node lengths-list-many-files
8cda6f8f
GM
15169@unnumberedsubsec Determine the lengths of @code{defuns}
15170@end ifnottex
15171
15172The design using a @code{while} loop is routine. The argument passed
15173the function is a list of files. As we saw earlier (@pxref{Loop
15174Example}), you can write a @code{while} loop so that the body of the
15175loop is evaluated if such a list contains elements, but to exit the
15176loop if the list is empty. For this design to work, the body of the
15177loop must contain an expression that shortens the list each time the
15178body is evaluated, so that eventually the list is empty. The usual
15179technique is to set the value of the list to the value of the @sc{cdr}
15180of the list each time the body is evaluated.
15181
15182@need 800
15183The template looks like this:
15184
15185@smallexample
15186@group
15187(while @var{test-whether-list-is-empty}
15188 @var{body}@dots{}
15189 @var{set-list-to-cdr-of-list})
15190@end group
15191@end smallexample
15192
15193Also, we remember that a @code{while} loop returns @code{nil} (the
15194result of evaluating the true-or-false-test), not the result of any
15195evaluation within its body. (The evaluations within the body of the
15196loop are done for their side effects.) However, the expression that
15197sets the lengths' list is part of the body---and that is the value
15198that we want returned by the function as a whole. To do this, we
15199enclose the @code{while} loop within a @code{let} expression, and
15200arrange that the last element of the @code{let} expression contains
15201the value of the lengths' list. (@xref{Incrementing Example, , Loop
15202Example with an Incrementing Counter}.)
15203
15204@findex lengths-list-many-files
15205@need 1250
15206These considerations lead us directly to the function itself:
15207
15208@smallexample
15209@group
15210;;; @r{Use @code{while} loop.}
15211(defun lengths-list-many-files (list-of-files)
15212 "Return list of lengths of defuns in LIST-OF-FILES."
15213@end group
15214@group
15215 (let (lengths-list)
15216
15217;;; @r{true-or-false-test}
15218 (while list-of-files
15219 (setq lengths-list
15220 (append
15221 lengths-list
15222
15223;;; @r{Generate a lengths' list.}
15224 (lengths-list-file
15225 (expand-file-name (car list-of-files)))))
15226@end group
15227
15228@group
15229;;; @r{Make files' list shorter.}
15230 (setq list-of-files (cdr list-of-files)))
15231
15232;;; @r{Return final value of lengths' list.}
15233 lengths-list))
15234@end group
15235@end smallexample
15236
15237@code{expand-file-name} is a built-in function that converts a file
15238name to the absolute, long, path name form. The function employs the
15239name of the directory in which the function is called.
15240
15241@c !!! 22.1.1 lisp sources location here
15242@need 1500
15243Thus, if @code{expand-file-name} is called on @code{debug.el} when
15244Emacs is visiting the
15245@file{/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/emacs-lisp/} directory,
15246
15247@smallexample
15248debug.el
15249@end smallexample
15250
15251@need 800
15252@noindent
15253becomes
15254
15255@c !!! 22.1.1 lisp sources location here
15256@smallexample
15257/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/emacs-lisp/debug.el
15258@end smallexample
15259
15260The only other new element of this function definition is the as yet
15261unstudied function @code{append}, which merits a short section for
15262itself.
15263
d6adf7e7 15264@node append
8cda6f8f
GM
15265@subsection The @code{append} Function
15266
15267@need 800
15268The @code{append} function attaches one list to another. Thus,
15269
15270@smallexample
15271(append '(1 2 3 4) '(5 6 7 8))
15272@end smallexample
15273
15274@need 800
15275@noindent
15276produces the list
15277
15278@smallexample
15279(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8)
15280@end smallexample
15281
15282This is exactly how we want to attach two lengths' lists produced by
15283@code{lengths-list-file} to each other. The results contrast with
15284@code{cons},
15285
15286@smallexample
15287(cons '(1 2 3 4) '(5 6 7 8))
15288@end smallexample
15289
15290@need 1250
15291@noindent
15292which constructs a new list in which the first argument to @code{cons}
15293becomes the first element of the new list:
15294
15295@smallexample
15296((1 2 3 4) 5 6 7 8)
15297@end smallexample
15298
d6adf7e7 15299@node Several files recursively
8cda6f8f
GM
15300@section Recursively Count Words in Different Files
15301
15302Besides a @code{while} loop, you can work on each of a list of files
15303with recursion. A recursive version of @code{lengths-list-many-files}
15304is short and simple.
15305
15306The recursive function has the usual parts: the `do-again-test', the
15307`next-step-expression', and the recursive call. The `do-again-test'
15308determines whether the function should call itself again, which it
15309will do if the @code{list-of-files} contains any remaining elements;
15310the `next-step-expression' resets the @code{list-of-files} to the
15311@sc{cdr} of itself, so eventually the list will be empty; and the
15312recursive call calls itself on the shorter list. The complete
15313function is shorter than this description!
15314@findex recursive-lengths-list-many-files
15315
15316@smallexample
15317@group
15318(defun recursive-lengths-list-many-files (list-of-files)
15319 "Return list of lengths of each defun in LIST-OF-FILES."
15320 (if list-of-files ; @r{do-again-test}
15321 (append
15322 (lengths-list-file
15323 (expand-file-name (car list-of-files)))
15324 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
15325 (cdr list-of-files)))))
15326@end group
15327@end smallexample
15328
15329@noindent
15330In a sentence, the function returns the lengths' list for the first of
15331the @code{list-of-files} appended to the result of calling itself on
15332the rest of the @code{list-of-files}.
15333
15334Here is a test of @code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files}, along with
15335the results of running @code{lengths-list-file} on each of the files
15336individually.
15337
15338Install @code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} and
15339@code{lengths-list-file}, if necessary, and then evaluate the
15340following expressions. You may need to change the files' pathnames;
15341those here work when this Info file and the Emacs sources are located
15342in their customary places. To change the expressions, copy them to
15343the @file{*scratch*} buffer, edit them, and then evaluate them.
15344
15345The results are shown after the @samp{@result{}}. (These results are
15346for files from Emacs version 22.1.1; files from other versions of
15347Emacs may produce different results.)
15348
15349@c !!! 22.1.1 lisp sources location here
15350@smallexample
15351@group
15352(cd "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/")
15353
15354(lengths-list-file "./lisp/macros.el")
15355 @result{} (283 263 480 90)
15356@end group
15357
15358@group
15359(lengths-list-file "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el")
15360 @result{} (38 32 29 95 178 180 321 218 324)
15361@end group
15362
15363@group
15364(lengths-list-file "./lisp/makesum.el")
15365 @result{} (85 181)
15366@end group
15367
15368@group
15369 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
15370 '("./lisp/macros.el"
15371 "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el"
15372 "./lisp/makesum.el"))
15373 @result{} (283 263 480 90 38 32 29 95 178 180 321 218 324 85 181)
15374@end group
15375@end smallexample
15376
15377The @code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} function produces the
15378output we want.
15379
15380The next step is to prepare the data in the list for display in a graph.
15381
d6adf7e7 15382@node Prepare the data
8cda6f8f
GM
15383@section Prepare the Data for Display in a Graph
15384
15385The @code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} function returns a list
15386of numbers. Each number records the length of a function definition.
15387What we need to do now is transform this data into a list of numbers
15388suitable for generating a graph. The new list will tell how many
15389functions definitions contain less than 10 words and
15390symbols, how many contain between 10 and 19 words and symbols, how
15391many contain between 20 and 29 words and symbols, and so on.
15392
15393In brief, we need to go through the lengths' list produced by the
15394@code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} function and count the number
15395of defuns within each range of lengths, and produce a list of those
15396numbers.
15397
15398@menu
15399* Data for Display in Detail::
15400* Sorting:: Sorting lists.
15401* Files List:: Making a list of files.
15402* Counting function definitions::
15403@end menu
15404
8cda6f8f 15405@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 15406@node Data for Display in Detail
8cda6f8f
GM
15407@unnumberedsubsec The Data for Display in Detail
15408@end ifnottex
15409
15410Based on what we have done before, we can readily foresee that it
15411should not be too hard to write a function that `@sc{cdr}s' down the
15412lengths' list, looks at each element, determines which length range it
15413is in, and increments a counter for that range.
15414
15415However, before beginning to write such a function, we should consider
15416the advantages of sorting the lengths' list first, so the numbers are
15417ordered from smallest to largest. First, sorting will make it easier
15418to count the numbers in each range, since two adjacent numbers will
15419either be in the same length range or in adjacent ranges. Second, by
15420inspecting a sorted list, we can discover the highest and lowest
15421number, and thereby determine the largest and smallest length range
15422that we will need.
15423
d6adf7e7 15424@node Sorting
8cda6f8f
GM
15425@subsection Sorting Lists
15426@findex sort
15427
15428Emacs contains a function to sort lists, called (as you might guess)
15429@code{sort}. The @code{sort} function takes two arguments, the list
15430to be sorted, and a predicate that determines whether the first of
15431two list elements is ``less'' than the second.
15432
15433As we saw earlier (@pxref{Wrong Type of Argument, , Using the Wrong
15434Type Object as an Argument}), a predicate is a function that
15435determines whether some property is true or false. The @code{sort}
15436function will reorder a list according to whatever property the
15437predicate uses; this means that @code{sort} can be used to sort
15438non-numeric lists by non-numeric criteria---it can, for example,
15439alphabetize a list.
15440
15441@need 1250
15442The @code{<} function is used when sorting a numeric list. For example,
15443
15444@smallexample
15445(sort '(4 8 21 17 33 7 21 7) '<)
15446@end smallexample
15447
15448@need 800
15449@noindent
15450produces this:
15451
15452@smallexample
15453(4 7 7 8 17 21 21 33)
15454@end smallexample
15455
15456@noindent
15457(Note that in this example, both the arguments are quoted so that the
15458symbols are not evaluated before being passed to @code{sort} as
15459arguments.)
15460
15461Sorting the list returned by the
15462@code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} function is straightforward;
15463it uses the @code{<} function:
15464
15465@ignore
154662006 Oct 29
15467In GNU Emacs 22, eval
15468(progn
15469 (cd "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.0.50/")
15470 (sort
15471 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
15472 '("./lisp/macros.el"
15473 "./lisp/mail/mailalias.el"
15474 "./lisp/makesum.el"))
15475 '<))
15476
15477@end ignore
15478
15479@smallexample
15480@group
15481(sort
15482 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
15483 '("./lisp/macros.el"
15484 "./lisp/mailalias.el"
15485 "./lisp/makesum.el"))
15486 '<)
15487@end group
15488@end smallexample
15489
15490@need 800
15491@noindent
15492which produces:
15493
15494@smallexample
15495(29 32 38 85 90 95 178 180 181 218 263 283 321 324 480)
15496@end smallexample
15497
15498@noindent
15499(Note that in this example, the first argument to @code{sort} is not
15500quoted, since the expression must be evaluated so as to produce the
15501list that is passed to @code{sort}.)
15502
d6adf7e7 15503@node Files List
8cda6f8f
GM
15504@subsection Making a List of Files
15505
15506The @code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} function requires a list
15507of files as its argument. For our test examples, we constructed such
15508a list by hand; but the Emacs Lisp source directory is too large for
15509us to do for that. Instead, we will write a function to do the job
15510for us. In this function, we will use both a @code{while} loop and a
15511recursive call.
15512
15513@findex directory-files
15514We did not have to write a function like this for older versions of
15515GNU Emacs, since they placed all the @samp{.el} files in one
15516directory. Instead, we were able to use the @code{directory-files}
15517function, which lists the names of files that match a specified
15518pattern within a single directory.
15519
15520However, recent versions of Emacs place Emacs Lisp files in
15521sub-directories of the top level @file{lisp} directory. This
15522re-arrangement eases navigation. For example, all the mail related
15523files are in a @file{lisp} sub-directory called @file{mail}. But at
15524the same time, this arrangement forces us to create a file listing
15525function that descends into the sub-directories.
15526
15527@findex files-in-below-directory
15528We can create this function, called @code{files-in-below-directory},
15529using familiar functions such as @code{car}, @code{nthcdr}, and
15530@code{substring} in conjunction with an existing function called
15531@code{directory-files-and-attributes}. This latter function not only
15532lists all the filenames in a directory, including the names
15533of sub-directories, but also their attributes.
15534
15535To restate our goal: to create a function that will enable us
15536to feed filenames to @code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files}
15537as a list that looks like this (but with more elements):
15538
15539@smallexample
15540@group
15541("./lisp/macros.el"
15542 "./lisp/mail/rmail.el"
15543 "./lisp/makesum.el")
15544@end group
15545@end smallexample
15546
15547The @code{directory-files-and-attributes} function returns a list of
15548lists. Each of the lists within the main list consists of 13
15549elements. The first element is a string that contains the name of the
f99f1641 15550file---which, in GNU/Linux, may be a `directory file', that is to
8cda6f8f
GM
15551say, a file with the special attributes of a directory. The second
15552element of the list is @code{t} for a directory, a string
15553for symbolic link (the string is the name linked to), or @code{nil}.
15554
15555For example, the first @samp{.el} file in the @file{lisp/} directory
15556is @file{abbrev.el}. Its name is
15557@file{/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/abbrev.el} and it is not a
15558directory or a symbolic link.
15559
15560@need 1000
15561This is how @code{directory-files-and-attributes} lists that file and
15562its attributes:
15563
15564@smallexample
15565@group
15566("abbrev.el"
15567nil
155681
155691000
15570100
15571@end group
15572@group
72ec96fb
PE
15573(20615 27034 579989 697000)
15574(17905 55681 0 0)
15575(20615 26327 734791 805000)
1557613188
15577"-rw-r--r--"
8cda6f8f
GM
15578@end group
15579@group
97976f9f 15580t
8cda6f8f
GM
155812971624
15582773)
15583@end group
15584@end smallexample
15585
15586@need 1200
15587On the other hand, @file{mail/} is a directory within the @file{lisp/}
15588directory. The beginning of its listing looks like this:
15589
15590@smallexample
15591@group
15592("mail"
15593t
15594@dots{}
15595)
15596@end group
15597@end smallexample
15598
15599(To learn about the different attributes, look at the documentation of
15600@code{file-attributes}. Bear in mind that the @code{file-attributes}
15601function does not list the filename, so its first element is
15602@code{directory-files-and-attributes}'s second element.)
15603
15604We will want our new function, @code{files-in-below-directory}, to
15605list the @samp{.el} files in the directory it is told to check, and in
15606any directories below that directory.
15607
15608This gives us a hint on how to construct
15609@code{files-in-below-directory}: within a directory, the function
15610should add @samp{.el} filenames to a list; and if, within a directory,
15611the function comes upon a sub-directory, it should go into that
15612sub-directory and repeat its actions.
15613
15614However, we should note that every directory contains a name that
15615refers to itself, called @file{.}, (``dot'') and a name that refers to
15616its parent directory, called @file{..} (``double dot''). (In
15617@file{/}, the root directory, @file{..} refers to itself, since
15618@file{/} has no parent.) Clearly, we do not want our
15619@code{files-in-below-directory} function to enter those directories,
15620since they always lead us, directly or indirectly, to the current
15621directory.
15622
15623Consequently, our @code{files-in-below-directory} function must do
15624several tasks:
15625
15626@itemize @bullet
15627@item
15628Check to see whether it is looking at a filename that ends in
15629@samp{.el}; and if so, add its name to a list.
15630
15631@item
15632Check to see whether it is looking at a filename that is the name of a
15633directory; and if so,
15634
15635@itemize @minus
15636@item
15637Check to see whether it is looking at @file{.} or @file{..}; and if
15638so skip it.
15639
15640@item
15641Or else, go into that directory and repeat the process.
15642@end itemize
15643@end itemize
15644
15645Let's write a function definition to do these tasks. We will use a
15646@code{while} loop to move from one filename to another within a
15647directory, checking what needs to be done; and we will use a recursive
15648call to repeat the actions on each sub-directory. The recursive
15649pattern is `accumulate'
15650(@pxref{Accumulate, , Recursive Pattern: @emph{accumulate}}),
15651using @code{append} as the combiner.
15652
15653@ignore
15654(directory-files "/usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/" t "\\.el$")
15655(shell-command "find /usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/ -name '*.el'")
15656
15657(directory-files "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/" t "\\.el$")
15658(shell-command "find /usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/ -name '*.el'")
15659@end ignore
15660
15661@c /usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/
15662
15663@need 800
15664Here is the function:
15665
15666@smallexample
15667@group
15668(defun files-in-below-directory (directory)
15669 "List the .el files in DIRECTORY and in its sub-directories."
15670 ;; Although the function will be used non-interactively,
15671 ;; it will be easier to test if we make it interactive.
15672 ;; The directory will have a name such as
15673 ;; "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/"
15674 (interactive "DDirectory name: ")
15675@end group
15676@group
15677 (let (el-files-list
15678 (current-directory-list
15679 (directory-files-and-attributes directory t)))
15680 ;; while we are in the current directory
15681 (while current-directory-list
15682@end group
15683@group
15684 (cond
15685 ;; check to see whether filename ends in `.el'
15686 ;; and if so, append its name to a list.
15687 ((equal ".el" (substring (car (car current-directory-list)) -3))
15688 (setq el-files-list
15689 (cons (car (car current-directory-list)) el-files-list)))
15690@end group
15691@group
15692 ;; check whether filename is that of a directory
15693 ((eq t (car (cdr (car current-directory-list))))
15694 ;; decide whether to skip or recurse
15695 (if
15696 (equal "."
15697 (substring (car (car current-directory-list)) -1))
15698 ;; then do nothing since filename is that of
15699 ;; current directory or parent, "." or ".."
15700 ()
15701@end group
15702@group
15703 ;; else descend into the directory and repeat the process
15704 (setq el-files-list
15705 (append
15706 (files-in-below-directory
15707 (car (car current-directory-list)))
15708 el-files-list)))))
15709 ;; move to the next filename in the list; this also
15710 ;; shortens the list so the while loop eventually comes to an end
15711 (setq current-directory-list (cdr current-directory-list)))
15712 ;; return the filenames
15713 el-files-list))
15714@end group
15715@end smallexample
15716
15717@c (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/")
15718@c (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/")
15719
15720The @code{files-in-below-directory} @code{directory-files} function
15721takes one argument, the name of a directory.
15722
15723@need 1250
15724Thus, on my system,
15725
15726@c (length (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/"))
15727
15728@c !!! 22.1.1 lisp sources location here
15729@smallexample
15730@group
15731(length
15732 (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/"))
15733@end group
15734@end smallexample
15735
15736@noindent
15737tells me that in and below my Lisp sources directory are 1031
15738@samp{.el} files.
15739
15740@code{files-in-below-directory} returns a list in reverse alphabetical
15741order. An expression to sort the list in alphabetical order looks
15742like this:
15743
15744@smallexample
15745@group
15746(sort
15747 (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/share/emacs/22.1.1/lisp/")
15748 'string-lessp)
15749@end group
15750@end smallexample
15751
15752@ignore
15753(defun test ()
15754 "Test how long it takes to find lengths of all sorted elisp defuns."
15755 (insert "\n" (current-time-string) "\n")
15756 (sit-for 0)
15757 (sort
15758 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
15759 (files-in-below-directory "/usr/local/src/emacs/lisp/"))
15760 '<)
15761 (insert (format "%s" (current-time-string))))
15762@end ignore
15763
d6adf7e7 15764@node Counting function definitions
8cda6f8f
GM
15765@subsection Counting function definitions
15766
15767Our immediate goal is to generate a list that tells us how many
15768function definitions contain fewer than 10 words and symbols, how many
15769contain between 10 and 19 words and symbols, how many contain between
1577020 and 29 words and symbols, and so on.
15771
15772With a sorted list of numbers, this is easy: count how many elements
15773of the list are smaller than 10, then, after moving past the numbers
15774just counted, count how many are smaller than 20, then, after moving
15775past the numbers just counted, count how many are smaller than 30, and
15776so on. Each of the numbers, 10, 20, 30, 40, and the like, is one
15777larger than the top of that range. We can call the list of such
15778numbers the @code{top-of-ranges} list.
15779
15780@need 1200
15781If we wished, we could generate this list automatically, but it is
15782simpler to write a list manually. Here it is:
15783@vindex top-of-ranges
15784
15785@smallexample
15786@group
15787(defvar top-of-ranges
15788 '(10 20 30 40 50
15789 60 70 80 90 100
15790 110 120 130 140 150
15791 160 170 180 190 200
15792 210 220 230 240 250
15793 260 270 280 290 300)
15794 "List specifying ranges for `defuns-per-range'.")
15795@end group
15796@end smallexample
15797
15798To change the ranges, we edit this list.
15799
15800Next, we need to write the function that creates the list of the
15801number of definitions within each range. Clearly, this function must
15802take the @code{sorted-lengths} and the @code{top-of-ranges} lists
15803as arguments.
15804
15805The @code{defuns-per-range} function must do two things again and
15806again: it must count the number of definitions within a range
15807specified by the current top-of-range value; and it must shift to the
15808next higher value in the @code{top-of-ranges} list after counting the
15809number of definitions in the current range. Since each of these
15810actions is repetitive, we can use @code{while} loops for the job.
15811One loop counts the number of definitions in the range defined by the
15812current top-of-range value, and the other loop selects each of the
15813top-of-range values in turn.
15814
15815Several entries of the @code{sorted-lengths} list are counted for each
15816range; this means that the loop for the @code{sorted-lengths} list
15817will be inside the loop for the @code{top-of-ranges} list, like a
15818small gear inside a big gear.
15819
15820The inner loop counts the number of definitions within the range. It
15821is a simple counting loop of the type we have seen before.
15822(@xref{Incrementing Loop, , A loop with an incrementing counter}.)
15823The true-or-false test of the loop tests whether the value from the
15824@code{sorted-lengths} list is smaller than the current value of the
15825top of the range. If it is, the function increments the counter and
15826tests the next value from the @code{sorted-lengths} list.
15827
15828@need 1250
15829The inner loop looks like this:
15830
15831@smallexample
15832@group
15833(while @var{length-element-smaller-than-top-of-range}
15834 (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
15835 (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))
15836@end group
15837@end smallexample
15838
15839The outer loop must start with the lowest value of the
15840@code{top-of-ranges} list, and then be set to each of the succeeding
15841higher values in turn. This can be done with a loop like this:
15842
15843@smallexample
15844@group
15845(while top-of-ranges
15846 @var{body-of-loop}@dots{}
15847 (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges)))
15848@end group
15849@end smallexample
15850
15851@need 1200
15852Put together, the two loops look like this:
15853
15854@smallexample
15855@group
15856(while top-of-ranges
15857
15858 ;; @r{Count the number of elements within the current range.}
15859 (while @var{length-element-smaller-than-top-of-range}
15860 (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
15861 (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))
15862
15863 ;; @r{Move to next range.}
15864 (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges)))
15865@end group
15866@end smallexample
15867
15868In addition, in each circuit of the outer loop, Emacs should record
15869the number of definitions within that range (the value of
15870@code{number-within-range}) in a list. We can use @code{cons} for
15871this purpose. (@xref{cons, , @code{cons}}.)
15872
15873The @code{cons} function works fine, except that the list it
15874constructs will contain the number of definitions for the highest
15875range at its beginning and the number of definitions for the lowest
15876range at its end. This is because @code{cons} attaches new elements
15877of the list to the beginning of the list, and since the two loops are
15878working their way through the lengths' list from the lower end first,
15879the @code{defuns-per-range-list} will end up largest number first.
15880But we will want to print our graph with smallest values first and the
15881larger later. The solution is to reverse the order of the
15882@code{defuns-per-range-list}. We can do this using the
15883@code{nreverse} function, which reverses the order of a list.
15884@findex nreverse
15885
15886@need 800
15887For example,
15888
15889@smallexample
15890(nreverse '(1 2 3 4))
15891@end smallexample
15892
15893@need 800
15894@noindent
15895produces:
15896
15897@smallexample
15898(4 3 2 1)
15899@end smallexample
15900
15901Note that the @code{nreverse} function is ``destructive''---that is,
15902it changes the list to which it is applied; this contrasts with the
15903@code{car} and @code{cdr} functions, which are non-destructive. In
15904this case, we do not want the original @code{defuns-per-range-list},
15905so it does not matter that it is destroyed. (The @code{reverse}
15906function provides a reversed copy of a list, leaving the original list
15907as is.)
15908@findex reverse
15909
15910@need 1250
15911Put all together, the @code{defuns-per-range} looks like this:
15912
15913@smallexample
15914@group
15915(defun defuns-per-range (sorted-lengths top-of-ranges)
15916 "SORTED-LENGTHS defuns in each TOP-OF-RANGES range."
15917 (let ((top-of-range (car top-of-ranges))
15918 (number-within-range 0)
15919 defuns-per-range-list)
15920@end group
15921
15922@group
15923 ;; @r{Outer loop.}
15924 (while top-of-ranges
15925@end group
15926
15927@group
15928 ;; @r{Inner loop.}
15929 (while (and
15930 ;; @r{Need number for numeric test.}
15931 (car sorted-lengths)
15932 (< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range))
15933@end group
15934
15935@group
15936 ;; @r{Count number of definitions within current range.}
15937 (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
15938 (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))
15939
15940 ;; @r{Exit inner loop but remain within outer loop.}
15941@end group
15942
15943@group
15944 (setq defuns-per-range-list
15945 (cons number-within-range defuns-per-range-list))
15946 (setq number-within-range 0) ; @r{Reset count to zero.}
15947@end group
15948
15949@group
15950 ;; @r{Move to next range.}
15951 (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges))
15952 ;; @r{Specify next top of range value.}
15953 (setq top-of-range (car top-of-ranges)))
15954@end group
15955
15956@group
15957 ;; @r{Exit outer loop and count the number of defuns larger than}
15958 ;; @r{ the largest top-of-range value.}
15959 (setq defuns-per-range-list
15960 (cons
15961 (length sorted-lengths)
15962 defuns-per-range-list))
15963@end group
15964
15965@group
15966 ;; @r{Return a list of the number of definitions within each range,}
15967 ;; @r{ smallest to largest.}
15968 (nreverse defuns-per-range-list)))
15969@end group
15970@end smallexample
15971
15972@need 1200
15973@noindent
15974The function is straightforward except for one subtle feature. The
15975true-or-false test of the inner loop looks like this:
15976
15977@smallexample
15978@group
15979(and (car sorted-lengths)
15980 (< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range))
15981@end group
15982@end smallexample
15983
15984@need 800
15985@noindent
15986instead of like this:
15987
15988@smallexample
15989(< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range)
15990@end smallexample
15991
15992The purpose of the test is to determine whether the first item in the
15993@code{sorted-lengths} list is less than the value of the top of the
15994range.
15995
15996The simple version of the test works fine unless the
15997@code{sorted-lengths} list has a @code{nil} value. In that case, the
15998@code{(car sorted-lengths)} expression function returns
15999@code{nil}. The @code{<} function cannot compare a number to
16000@code{nil}, which is an empty list, so Emacs signals an error and
16001stops the function from attempting to continue to execute.
16002
16003The @code{sorted-lengths} list always becomes @code{nil} when the
16004counter reaches the end of the list. This means that any attempt to
16005use the @code{defuns-per-range} function with the simple version of
16006the test will fail.
16007
16008We solve the problem by using the @code{(car sorted-lengths)}
16009expression in conjunction with the @code{and} expression. The
16010@code{(car sorted-lengths)} expression returns a non-@code{nil}
16011value so long as the list has at least one number within it, but
16012returns @code{nil} if the list is empty. The @code{and} expression
16013first evaluates the @code{(car sorted-lengths)} expression, and
16014if it is @code{nil}, returns false @emph{without} evaluating the
16015@code{<} expression. But if the @code{(car sorted-lengths)}
16016expression returns a non-@code{nil} value, the @code{and} expression
16017evaluates the @code{<} expression, and returns that value as the value
16018of the @code{and} expression.
16019
16020@c colon in printed section title causes problem in Info cross reference
16021This way, we avoid an error.
16022@iftex
16023@noindent
16024(For information about @code{and}, see
16025@ref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new} function}.)
16026@end iftex
16027@ifinfo
16028@noindent
16029(@xref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new} function}, for
16030information about @code{and}.)
16031@end ifinfo
16032
16033Here is a short test of the @code{defuns-per-range} function. First,
16034evaluate the expression that binds (a shortened)
16035@code{top-of-ranges} list to the list of values, then evaluate the
16036expression for binding the @code{sorted-lengths} list, and then
16037evaluate the @code{defuns-per-range} function.
16038
16039@smallexample
16040@group
16041;; @r{(Shorter list than we will use later.)}
16042(setq top-of-ranges
16043 '(110 120 130 140 150
16044 160 170 180 190 200))
16045
16046(setq sorted-lengths
16047 '(85 86 110 116 122 129 154 176 179 200 265 300 300))
16048
16049(defuns-per-range sorted-lengths top-of-ranges)
16050@end group
16051@end smallexample
16052
16053@need 800
16054@noindent
16055The list returned looks like this:
16056
16057@smallexample
16058(2 2 2 0 0 1 0 2 0 0 4)
16059@end smallexample
16060
16061@noindent
16062Indeed, there are two elements of the @code{sorted-lengths} list
16063smaller than 110, two elements between 110 and 119, two elements
16064between 120 and 129, and so on. There are four elements with a value
16065of 200 or larger.
16066
16067@c The next step is to turn this numbers' list into a graph.
d6adf7e7 16068@node Readying a Graph
8cda6f8f
GM
16069@chapter Readying a Graph
16070@cindex Readying a graph
16071@cindex Graph prototype
16072@cindex Prototype graph
16073@cindex Body of graph
16074
16075Our goal is to construct a graph showing the numbers of function
16076definitions of various lengths in the Emacs lisp sources.
16077
16078As a practical matter, if you were creating a graph, you would
16079probably use a program such as @code{gnuplot} to do the job.
16080(@code{gnuplot} is nicely integrated into GNU Emacs.) In this case,
16081however, we create one from scratch, and in the process we will
16082re-acquaint ourselves with some of what we learned before and learn
16083more.
16084
16085In this chapter, we will first write a simple graph printing function.
16086This first definition will be a @dfn{prototype}, a rapidly written
16087function that enables us to reconnoiter this unknown graph-making
16088territory. We will discover dragons, or find that they are myth.
16089After scouting the terrain, we will feel more confident and enhance
16090the function to label the axes automatically.
16091
16092@menu
16093* Columns of a graph::
16094* graph-body-print:: How to print the body of a graph.
16095* recursive-graph-body-print::
16096* Printed Axes::
16097* Line Graph Exercise::
16098@end menu
16099
8cda6f8f 16100@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 16101@node Columns of a graph
8cda6f8f
GM
16102@unnumberedsec Printing the Columns of a Graph
16103@end ifnottex
16104
16105Since Emacs is designed to be flexible and work with all kinds of
16106terminals, including character-only terminals, the graph will need to
16107be made from one of the `typewriter' symbols. An asterisk will do; as
16108we enhance the graph-printing function, we can make the choice of
16109symbol a user option.
16110
16111We can call this function @code{graph-body-print}; it will take a
16112@code{numbers-list} as its only argument. At this stage, we will not
16113label the graph, but only print its body.
16114
16115The @code{graph-body-print} function inserts a vertical column of
16116asterisks for each element in the @code{numbers-list}. The height of
16117each line is determined by the value of that element of the
16118@code{numbers-list}.
16119
16120Inserting columns is a repetitive act; that means that this function can
16121be written either with a @code{while} loop or recursively.
16122
16123Our first challenge is to discover how to print a column of asterisks.
16124Usually, in Emacs, we print characters onto a screen horizontally,
16125line by line, by typing. We have two routes we can follow: write our
16126own column-insertion function or discover whether one exists in Emacs.
16127
16128To see whether there is one in Emacs, we can use the @kbd{M-x apropos}
16129command. This command is like the @kbd{C-h a} (@code{command-apropos})
16130command, except that the latter finds only those functions that are
16131commands. The @kbd{M-x apropos} command lists all symbols that match
16132a regular expression, including functions that are not interactive.
16133@findex apropos
16134
16135What we want to look for is some command that prints or inserts
16136columns. Very likely, the name of the function will contain either
16137the word `print' or the word `insert' or the word `column'.
16138Therefore, we can simply type @kbd{M-x apropos RET
16139print\|insert\|column RET} and look at the result. On my system, this
16140command once too takes quite some time, and then produced a list of 79
16141functions and variables. Now it does not take much time at all and
16142produces a list of 211 functions and variables. Scanning down the
16143list, the only function that looks as if it might do the job is
16144@code{insert-rectangle}.
16145
16146@need 1200
16147Indeed, this is the function we want; its documentation says:
16148
16149@smallexample
16150@group
16151insert-rectangle:
16152Insert text of RECTANGLE with upper left corner at point.
16153RECTANGLE's first line is inserted at point,
16154its second line is inserted at a point vertically under point, etc.
16155RECTANGLE should be a list of strings.
16156After this command, the mark is at the upper left corner
16157and point is at the lower right corner.
16158@end group
16159@end smallexample
16160
16161We can run a quick test, to make sure it does what we expect of it.
16162
16163Here is the result of placing the cursor after the
16164@code{insert-rectangle} expression and typing @kbd{C-u C-x C-e}
16165(@code{eval-last-sexp}). The function inserts the strings
16166@samp{"first"}, @samp{"second"}, and @samp{"third"} at and below
16167point. Also the function returns @code{nil}.
16168
16169@smallexample
16170@group
16171(insert-rectangle '("first" "second" "third"))first
16172 second
16173 thirdnil
16174@end group
16175@end smallexample
16176
16177@noindent
16178Of course, we won't be inserting the text of the
16179@code{insert-rectangle} expression itself into the buffer in which we
16180are making the graph, but will call the function from our program. We
16181shall, however, have to make sure that point is in the buffer at the
16182place where the @code{insert-rectangle} function will insert its
16183column of strings.
16184
16185If you are reading this in Info, you can see how this works by
16186switching to another buffer, such as the @file{*scratch*} buffer,
16187placing point somewhere in the buffer, typing @kbd{M-:}, typing the
16188@code{insert-rectangle} expression into the minibuffer at the prompt,
16189and then typing @key{RET}. This causes Emacs to evaluate the
16190expression in the minibuffer, but to use as the value of point the
16191position of point in the @file{*scratch*} buffer. (@kbd{M-:} is the
16192keybinding for @code{eval-expression}. Also, @code{nil} does not
16193appear in the @file{*scratch*} buffer since the expression is
16194evaluated in the minibuffer.)
16195
16196We find when we do this that point ends up at the end of the last
16197inserted line---that is to say, this function moves point as a
16198side-effect. If we were to repeat the command, with point at this
16199position, the next insertion would be below and to the right of the
16200previous insertion. We don't want this! If we are going to make a
16201bar graph, the columns need to be beside each other.
16202
16203So we discover that each cycle of the column-inserting @code{while}
16204loop must reposition point to the place we want it, and that place
16205will be at the top, not the bottom, of the column. Moreover, we
16206remember that when we print a graph, we do not expect all the columns
16207to be the same height. This means that the top of each column may be
16208at a different height from the previous one. We cannot simply
16209reposition point to the same line each time, but moved over to the
16210right---or perhaps we can@dots{}
16211
16212We are planning to make the columns of the bar graph out of asterisks.
16213The number of asterisks in the column is the number specified by the
16214current element of the @code{numbers-list}. We need to construct a
16215list of asterisks of the right length for each call to
16216@code{insert-rectangle}. If this list consists solely of the requisite
16217number of asterisks, then we will have position point the right number
16218of lines above the base for the graph to print correctly. This could
16219be difficult.
16220
16221Alternatively, if we can figure out some way to pass
16222@code{insert-rectangle} a list of the same length each time, then we
16223can place point on the same line each time, but move it over one
16224column to the right for each new column. If we do this, however, some
16225of the entries in the list passed to @code{insert-rectangle} must be
16226blanks rather than asterisks. For example, if the maximum height of
16227the graph is 5, but the height of the column is 3, then
16228@code{insert-rectangle} requires an argument that looks like this:
16229
16230@smallexample
16231(" " " " "*" "*" "*")
16232@end smallexample
16233
16234This last proposal is not so difficult, so long as we can determine
16235the column height. There are two ways for us to specify the column
16236height: we can arbitrarily state what it will be, which would work
16237fine for graphs of that height; or we can search through the list of
16238numbers and use the maximum height of the list as the maximum height
16239of the graph. If the latter operation were difficult, then the former
16240procedure would be easiest, but there is a function built into Emacs
16241that determines the maximum of its arguments. We can use that
16242function. The function is called @code{max} and it returns the
16243largest of all its arguments, which must be numbers. Thus, for
16244example,
16245
16246@smallexample
16247(max 3 4 6 5 7 3)
16248@end smallexample
16249
16250@noindent
16251returns 7. (A corresponding function called @code{min} returns the
16252smallest of all its arguments.)
16253@findex max
16254@findex min
16255
16256However, we cannot simply call @code{max} on the @code{numbers-list};
16257the @code{max} function expects numbers as its argument, not a list of
16258numbers. Thus, the following expression,
16259
16260@smallexample
16261(max '(3 4 6 5 7 3))
16262@end smallexample
16263
16264@need 800
16265@noindent
16266produces the following error message;
16267
16268@smallexample
16269Wrong type of argument: number-or-marker-p, (3 4 6 5 7 3)
16270@end smallexample
16271
16272@findex apply
16273We need a function that passes a list of arguments to a function.
16274This function is @code{apply}. This function `applies' its first
16275argument (a function) to its remaining arguments, the last of which
16276may be a list.
16277
16278@need 1250
16279For example,
16280
16281@smallexample
16282(apply 'max 3 4 7 3 '(4 8 5))
16283@end smallexample
16284
16285@noindent
16286returns 8.
16287
16288(Incidentally, I don't know how you would learn of this function
16289without a book such as this. It is possible to discover other
16290functions, like @code{search-forward} or @code{insert-rectangle}, by
16291guessing at a part of their names and then using @code{apropos}. Even
16292though its base in metaphor is clear---`apply' its first argument to
16293the rest---I doubt a novice would come up with that particular word
16294when using @code{apropos} or other aid. Of course, I could be wrong;
16295after all, the function was first named by someone who had to invent
16296it.)
16297
16298The second and subsequent arguments to @code{apply} are optional, so
16299we can use @code{apply} to call a function and pass the elements of a
16300list to it, like this, which also returns 8:
16301
16302@smallexample
16303(apply 'max '(4 8 5))
16304@end smallexample
16305
16306This latter way is how we will use @code{apply}. The
16307@code{recursive-lengths-list-many-files} function returns a numbers'
16308list to which we can apply @code{max} (we could also apply @code{max} to
16309the sorted numbers' list; it does not matter whether the list is
16310sorted or not.)
16311
16312@need 800
16313Hence, the operation for finding the maximum height of the graph is this:
16314
16315@smallexample
16316(setq max-graph-height (apply 'max numbers-list))
16317@end smallexample
16318
16319Now we can return to the question of how to create a list of strings
16320for a column of the graph. Told the maximum height of the graph
16321and the number of asterisks that should appear in the column, the
16322function should return a list of strings for the
16323@code{insert-rectangle} command to insert.
16324
16325Each column is made up of asterisks or blanks. Since the function is
16326passed the value of the height of the column and the number of
16327asterisks in the column, the number of blanks can be found by
16328subtracting the number of asterisks from the height of the column.
16329Given the number of blanks and the number of asterisks, two
16330@code{while} loops can be used to construct the list:
16331
16332@smallexample
16333@group
16334;;; @r{First version.}
16335(defun column-of-graph (max-graph-height actual-height)
16336 "Return list of strings that is one column of a graph."
16337 (let ((insert-list nil)
16338 (number-of-top-blanks
16339 (- max-graph-height actual-height)))
16340@end group
16341
16342@group
16343 ;; @r{Fill in asterisks.}
16344 (while (> actual-height 0)
16345 (setq insert-list (cons "*" insert-list))
16346 (setq actual-height (1- actual-height)))
16347@end group
16348
16349@group
16350 ;; @r{Fill in blanks.}
16351 (while (> number-of-top-blanks 0)
16352 (setq insert-list (cons " " insert-list))
16353 (setq number-of-top-blanks
16354 (1- number-of-top-blanks)))
16355@end group
16356
16357@group
16358 ;; @r{Return whole list.}
16359 insert-list))
16360@end group
16361@end smallexample
16362
16363If you install this function and then evaluate the following
16364expression you will see that it returns the list as desired:
16365
16366@smallexample
16367(column-of-graph 5 3)
16368@end smallexample
16369
16370@need 800
16371@noindent
16372returns
16373
16374@smallexample
16375(" " " " "*" "*" "*")
16376@end smallexample
16377
16378As written, @code{column-of-graph} contains a major flaw: the symbols
16379used for the blank and for the marked entries in the column are
16380`hard-coded' as a space and asterisk. This is fine for a prototype,
16381but you, or another user, may wish to use other symbols. For example,
16382in testing the graph function, you many want to use a period in place
16383of the space, to make sure the point is being repositioned properly
16384each time the @code{insert-rectangle} function is called; or you might
16385want to substitute a @samp{+} sign or other symbol for the asterisk.
16386You might even want to make a graph-column that is more than one
16387display column wide. The program should be more flexible. The way to
16388do that is to replace the blank and the asterisk with two variables
16389that we can call @code{graph-blank} and @code{graph-symbol} and define
16390those variables separately.
16391
16392Also, the documentation is not well written. These considerations
16393lead us to the second version of the function:
16394
16395@smallexample
16396@group
16397(defvar graph-symbol "*"
16398 "String used as symbol in graph, usually an asterisk.")
16399@end group
16400
16401@group
16402(defvar graph-blank " "
16403 "String used as blank in graph, usually a blank space.
16404graph-blank must be the same number of columns wide
16405as graph-symbol.")
16406@end group
16407@end smallexample
16408
16409@noindent
16410(For an explanation of @code{defvar}, see
16411@ref{defvar, , Initializing a Variable with @code{defvar}}.)
16412
16413@smallexample
16414@group
16415;;; @r{Second version.}
16416(defun column-of-graph (max-graph-height actual-height)
16417 "Return MAX-GRAPH-HEIGHT strings; ACTUAL-HEIGHT are graph-symbols.
16418
16419@end group
16420@group
16421The graph-symbols are contiguous entries at the end
16422of the list.
16423The list will be inserted as one column of a graph.
16424The strings are either graph-blank or graph-symbol."
16425@end group
16426
16427@group
16428 (let ((insert-list nil)
16429 (number-of-top-blanks
16430 (- max-graph-height actual-height)))
16431@end group
16432
16433@group
16434 ;; @r{Fill in @code{graph-symbols}.}
16435 (while (> actual-height 0)
16436 (setq insert-list (cons graph-symbol insert-list))
16437 (setq actual-height (1- actual-height)))
16438@end group
16439
16440@group
16441 ;; @r{Fill in @code{graph-blanks}.}
16442 (while (> number-of-top-blanks 0)
16443 (setq insert-list (cons graph-blank insert-list))
16444 (setq number-of-top-blanks
16445 (1- number-of-top-blanks)))
16446
16447 ;; @r{Return whole list.}
16448 insert-list))
16449@end group
16450@end smallexample
16451
16452If we wished, we could rewrite @code{column-of-graph} a third time to
16453provide optionally for a line graph as well as for a bar graph. This
16454would not be hard to do. One way to think of a line graph is that it
16455is no more than a bar graph in which the part of each bar that is
16456below the top is blank. To construct a column for a line graph, the
16457function first constructs a list of blanks that is one shorter than
16458the value, then it uses @code{cons} to attach a graph symbol to the
16459list; then it uses @code{cons} again to attach the `top blanks' to
16460the list.
16461
16462It is easy to see how to write such a function, but since we don't
16463need it, we will not do it. But the job could be done, and if it were
16464done, it would be done with @code{column-of-graph}. Even more
16465important, it is worth noting that few changes would have to be made
16466anywhere else. The enhancement, if we ever wish to make it, is
16467simple.
16468
16469Now, finally, we come to our first actual graph printing function.
16470This prints the body of a graph, not the labels for the vertical and
16471horizontal axes, so we can call this @code{graph-body-print}.
16472
d6adf7e7 16473@node graph-body-print
8cda6f8f
GM
16474@section The @code{graph-body-print} Function
16475@findex graph-body-print
16476
16477After our preparation in the preceding section, the
16478@code{graph-body-print} function is straightforward. The function
16479will print column after column of asterisks and blanks, using the
16480elements of a numbers' list to specify the number of asterisks in each
16481column. This is a repetitive act, which means we can use a
16482decrementing @code{while} loop or recursive function for the job. In
16483this section, we will write the definition using a @code{while} loop.
16484
16485The @code{column-of-graph} function requires the height of the graph
16486as an argument, so we should determine and record that as a local variable.
16487
16488This leads us to the following template for the @code{while} loop
16489version of this function:
16490
16491@smallexample
16492@group
16493(defun graph-body-print (numbers-list)
16494 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
16495 (let ((height @dots{}
16496 @dots{}))
16497@end group
16498
16499@group
16500 (while numbers-list
16501 @var{insert-columns-and-reposition-point}
16502 (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)))))
16503@end group
16504@end smallexample
16505
16506@noindent
16507We need to fill in the slots of the template.
16508
16509Clearly, we can use the @code{(apply 'max numbers-list)} expression to
16510determine the height of the graph.
16511
16512The @code{while} loop will cycle through the @code{numbers-list} one
16513element at a time. As it is shortened by the @code{(setq numbers-list
16514(cdr numbers-list))} expression, the @sc{car} of each instance of the
16515list is the value of the argument for @code{column-of-graph}.
16516
16517At each cycle of the @code{while} loop, the @code{insert-rectangle}
16518function inserts the list returned by @code{column-of-graph}. Since
16519the @code{insert-rectangle} function moves point to the lower right of
16520the inserted rectangle, we need to save the location of point at the
16521time the rectangle is inserted, move back to that position after the
16522rectangle is inserted, and then move horizontally to the next place
16523from which @code{insert-rectangle} is called.
16524
16525If the inserted columns are one character wide, as they will be if
16526single blanks and asterisks are used, the repositioning command is
16527simply @code{(forward-char 1)}; however, the width of a column may be
16528greater than one. This means that the repositioning command should be
16529written @code{(forward-char symbol-width)}. The @code{symbol-width}
16530itself is the length of a @code{graph-blank} and can be found using
16531the expression @code{(length graph-blank)}. The best place to bind
16532the @code{symbol-width} variable to the value of the width of graph
16533column is in the varlist of the @code{let} expression.
16534
16535@need 1250
16536These considerations lead to the following function definition:
16537
16538@smallexample
16539@group
16540(defun graph-body-print (numbers-list)
16541 "Print a bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
16542The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values."
16543
16544 (let ((height (apply 'max numbers-list))
16545 (symbol-width (length graph-blank))
16546 from-position)
16547@end group
16548
16549@group
16550 (while numbers-list
16551 (setq from-position (point))
16552 (insert-rectangle
16553 (column-of-graph height (car numbers-list)))
16554 (goto-char from-position)
16555 (forward-char symbol-width)
16556@end group
16557@group
16558 ;; @r{Draw graph column by column.}
16559 (sit-for 0)
16560 (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)))
16561@end group
16562@group
16563 ;; @r{Place point for X axis labels.}
16564 (forward-line height)
16565 (insert "\n")
16566))
16567@end group
16568@end smallexample
16569
16570@noindent
16571The one unexpected expression in this function is the
16572@w{@code{(sit-for 0)}} expression in the @code{while} loop. This
16573expression makes the graph printing operation more interesting to
16574watch than it would be otherwise. The expression causes Emacs to
16575`sit' or do nothing for a zero length of time and then redraw the
16576screen. Placed here, it causes Emacs to redraw the screen column by
16577column. Without it, Emacs would not redraw the screen until the
16578function exits.
16579
16580We can test @code{graph-body-print} with a short list of numbers.
16581
16582@enumerate
16583@item
16584Install @code{graph-symbol}, @code{graph-blank},
16585@code{column-of-graph}, which are in
16586@iftex
16587@ref{Readying a Graph, , Readying a Graph},
16588@end iftex
16589@ifinfo
16590@ref{Columns of a graph},
16591@end ifinfo
16592and @code{graph-body-print}.
16593
16594@need 800
16595@item
16596Copy the following expression:
16597
16598@smallexample
16599(graph-body-print '(1 2 3 4 6 4 3 5 7 6 5 2 3))
16600@end smallexample
16601
16602@item
16603Switch to the @file{*scratch*} buffer and place the cursor where you
16604want the graph to start.
16605
16606@item
16607Type @kbd{M-:} (@code{eval-expression}).
16608
16609@item
16610Yank the @code{graph-body-print} expression into the minibuffer
16611with @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank)}.
16612
16613@item
16614Press @key{RET} to evaluate the @code{graph-body-print} expression.
16615@end enumerate
16616
16617@need 800
16618Emacs will print a graph like this:
16619
16620@smallexample
16621@group
16622 *
16623 * **
16624 * ****
16625 *** ****
16626 ********* *
16627 ************
16628 *************
16629@end group
16630@end smallexample
16631
d6adf7e7 16632@node recursive-graph-body-print
8cda6f8f
GM
16633@section The @code{recursive-graph-body-print} Function
16634@findex recursive-graph-body-print
16635
16636The @code{graph-body-print} function may also be written recursively.
16637The recursive solution is divided into two parts: an outside `wrapper'
16638that uses a @code{let} expression to determine the values of several
16639variables that need only be found once, such as the maximum height of
16640the graph, and an inside function that is called recursively to print
16641the graph.
16642
16643@need 1250
16644The `wrapper' is uncomplicated:
16645
16646@smallexample
16647@group
16648(defun recursive-graph-body-print (numbers-list)
16649 "Print a bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
16650The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values."
16651 (let ((height (apply 'max numbers-list))
16652 (symbol-width (length graph-blank))
16653 from-position)
16654 (recursive-graph-body-print-internal
16655 numbers-list
16656 height
16657 symbol-width)))
16658@end group
16659@end smallexample
16660
16661The recursive function is a little more difficult. It has four parts:
16662the `do-again-test', the printing code, the recursive call, and the
16663`next-step-expression'. The `do-again-test' is a @code{when}
16664expression that determines whether the @code{numbers-list} contains
16665any remaining elements; if it does, the function prints one column of
16666the graph using the printing code and calls itself again. The
16667function calls itself again according to the value produced by the
16668`next-step-expression' which causes the call to act on a shorter
16669version of the @code{numbers-list}.
16670
16671@smallexample
16672@group
16673(defun recursive-graph-body-print-internal
16674 (numbers-list height symbol-width)
16675 "Print a bar graph.
16676Used within recursive-graph-body-print function."
16677@end group
16678
16679@group
16680 (when numbers-list
16681 (setq from-position (point))
16682 (insert-rectangle
16683 (column-of-graph height (car numbers-list)))
16684@end group
16685@group
16686 (goto-char from-position)
16687 (forward-char symbol-width)
16688 (sit-for 0) ; @r{Draw graph column by column.}
16689 (recursive-graph-body-print-internal
16690 (cdr numbers-list) height symbol-width)))
16691@end group
16692@end smallexample
16693
16694@need 1250
16695After installation, this expression can be tested; here is a sample:
16696
16697@smallexample
16698(recursive-graph-body-print '(3 2 5 6 7 5 3 4 6 4 3 2 1))
16699@end smallexample
16700
16701@need 800
16702Here is what @code{recursive-graph-body-print} produces:
16703
16704@smallexample
16705@group
16706 *
16707 ** *
16708 **** *
16709 **** ***
16710 * *********
16711 ************
16712 *************
16713@end group
16714@end smallexample
16715
16716Either of these two functions, @code{graph-body-print} or
16717@code{recursive-graph-body-print}, create the body of a graph.
16718
d6adf7e7 16719@node Printed Axes
8cda6f8f
GM
16720@section Need for Printed Axes
16721
16722A graph needs printed axes, so you can orient yourself. For a do-once
44e97401 16723project, it may be reasonable to draw the axes by hand using Emacs's
8cda6f8f
GM
16724Picture mode; but a graph drawing function may be used more than once.
16725
16726For this reason, I have written enhancements to the basic
16727@code{print-graph-body} function that automatically print labels for
16728the horizontal and vertical axes. Since the label printing functions
16729do not contain much new material, I have placed their description in
09e80d9f 16730an appendix. @xref{Full Graph, , A Graph with Labeled Axes}.
8cda6f8f 16731
d6adf7e7 16732@node Line Graph Exercise
8cda6f8f
GM
16733@section Exercise
16734
16735Write a line graph version of the graph printing functions.
16736
d6adf7e7 16737@node Emacs Initialization
8cda6f8f
GM
16738@chapter Your @file{.emacs} File
16739@cindex @file{.emacs} file
16740@cindex Customizing your @file{.emacs} file
16741@cindex Initialization file
16742
f99f1641 16743``You don't have to like Emacs to like it''---this seemingly
8cda6f8f
GM
16744paradoxical statement is the secret of GNU Emacs. The plain, `out of
16745the box' Emacs is a generic tool. Most people who use it, customize
16746it to suit themselves.
16747
16748GNU Emacs is mostly written in Emacs Lisp; this means that by writing
16749expressions in Emacs Lisp you can change or extend Emacs.
16750
16751@menu
16752* Default Configuration::
16753* Site-wide Init:: You can write site-wide init files.
16754* defcustom:: Emacs will write code for you.
16755* Beginning a .emacs File:: How to write a @code{.emacs file}.
16756* Text and Auto-fill:: Automatically wrap lines.
16757* Mail Aliases:: Use abbreviations for email addresses.
16758* Indent Tabs Mode:: Don't use tabs with @TeX{}
16759* Keybindings:: Create some personal keybindings.
16760* Keymaps:: More about key binding.
16761* Loading Files:: Load (i.e., evaluate) files automatically.
16762* Autoload:: Make functions available.
16763* Simple Extension:: Define a function; bind it to a key.
16764* X11 Colors:: Colors in X.
16765* Miscellaneous::
16766* Mode Line:: How to customize your mode line.
16767@end menu
16768
8cda6f8f 16769@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 16770@node Default Configuration
44e97401 16771@unnumberedsec Emacs's Default Configuration
8cda6f8f
GM
16772@end ifnottex
16773
44e97401 16774There are those who appreciate Emacs's default configuration. After
8cda6f8f
GM
16775all, Emacs starts you in C mode when you edit a C file, starts you in
16776Fortran mode when you edit a Fortran file, and starts you in
16777Fundamental mode when you edit an unadorned file. This all makes
16778sense, if you do not know who is going to use Emacs. Who knows what a
16779person hopes to do with an unadorned file? Fundamental mode is the
16780right default for such a file, just as C mode is the right default for
16781editing C code. (Enough programming languages have syntaxes
16782that enable them to share or nearly share features, so C mode is
6bd6c2fa 16783now provided by CC mode, the `C Collection'.)
8cda6f8f
GM
16784
16785But when you do know who is going to use Emacs---you,
16786yourself---then it makes sense to customize Emacs.
16787
16788For example, I seldom want Fundamental mode when I edit an
16789otherwise undistinguished file; I want Text mode. This is why I
16790customize Emacs: so it suits me.
16791
16792You can customize and extend Emacs by writing or adapting a
16793@file{~/.emacs} file. This is your personal initialization file; its
16794contents, written in Emacs Lisp, tell Emacs what to do.@footnote{You
16795may also add @file{.el} to @file{~/.emacs} and call it a
16796@file{~/.emacs.el} file. In the past, you were forbidden to type the
16797extra keystrokes that the name @file{~/.emacs.el} requires, but now
16798you may. The new format is consistent with the Emacs Lisp file
16799naming conventions; the old format saves typing.}
16800
16801A @file{~/.emacs} file contains Emacs Lisp code. You can write this
44e97401 16802code yourself; or you can use Emacs's @code{customize} feature to write
8cda6f8f
GM
16803the code for you. You can combine your own expressions and
16804auto-written Customize expressions in your @file{.emacs} file.
16805
16806(I myself prefer to write my own expressions, except for those,
16807particularly fonts, that I find easier to manipulate using the
16808@code{customize} command. I combine the two methods.)
16809
16810Most of this chapter is about writing expressions yourself. It
16811describes a simple @file{.emacs} file; for more information, see
16812@ref{Init File, , The Init File, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, and
16813@ref{Init File, , The Init File, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
16814Manual}.
16815
d6adf7e7 16816@node Site-wide Init
8cda6f8f
GM
16817@section Site-wide Initialization Files
16818
16819@cindex @file{default.el} init file
16820@cindex @file{site-init.el} init file
16821@cindex @file{site-load.el} init file
16822In addition to your personal initialization file, Emacs automatically
16823loads various site-wide initialization files, if they exist. These
16824have the same form as your @file{.emacs} file, but are loaded by
16825everyone.
16826
16827Two site-wide initialization files, @file{site-load.el} and
16828@file{site-init.el}, are loaded into Emacs and then `dumped' if a
16829`dumped' version of Emacs is created, as is most common. (Dumped
16830copies of Emacs load more quickly. However, once a file is loaded and
16831dumped, a change to it does not lead to a change in Emacs unless you
16832load it yourself or re-dump Emacs. @xref{Building Emacs, , Building
16833Emacs, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, and the
16834@file{INSTALL} file.)
16835
16836Three other site-wide initialization files are loaded automatically
16837each time you start Emacs, if they exist. These are
16838@file{site-start.el}, which is loaded @emph{before} your @file{.emacs}
16839file, and @file{default.el}, and the terminal type file, which are both
16840loaded @emph{after} your @file{.emacs} file.
16841
16842Settings and definitions in your @file{.emacs} file will overwrite
16843conflicting settings and definitions in a @file{site-start.el} file,
16844if it exists; but the settings and definitions in a @file{default.el}
16845or terminal type file will overwrite those in your @file{.emacs} file.
16846(You can prevent interference from a terminal type file by setting
16847@code{term-file-prefix} to @code{nil}. @xref{Simple Extension, , A
16848Simple Extension}.)
16849
16850@c Rewritten to avoid overfull hbox.
16851The @file{INSTALL} file that comes in the distribution contains
16852descriptions of the @file{site-init.el} and @file{site-load.el} files.
16853
16854The @file{loadup.el}, @file{startup.el}, and @file{loaddefs.el} files
16855control loading. These files are in the @file{lisp} directory of the
16856Emacs distribution and are worth perusing.
16857
16858The @file{loaddefs.el} file contains a good many suggestions as to
16859what to put into your own @file{.emacs} file, or into a site-wide
16860initialization file.
16861
d6adf7e7 16862@node defcustom
8cda6f8f
GM
16863@section Specifying Variables using @code{defcustom}
16864@findex defcustom
16865
16866You can specify variables using @code{defcustom} so that you and
44e97401 16867others can then use Emacs's @code{customize} feature to set their
8cda6f8f
GM
16868values. (You cannot use @code{customize} to write function
16869definitions; but you can write @code{defuns} in your @file{.emacs}
16870file. Indeed, you can write any Lisp expression in your @file{.emacs}
16871file.)
16872
767b8eae
XF
16873The @code{customize} feature depends on the @code{defcustom} macro.
16874Although you can use @code{defvar} or @code{setq} for variables that
16875users set, the @code{defcustom} macro is designed for the job.
8cda6f8f
GM
16876
16877You can use your knowledge of @code{defvar} for writing the
16878first three arguments for @code{defcustom}. The first argument to
16879@code{defcustom} is the name of the variable. The second argument is
16880the variable's initial value, if any; and this value is set only if
16881the value has not already been set. The third argument is the
16882documentation.
16883
16884The fourth and subsequent arguments to @code{defcustom} specify types
16885and options; these are not featured in @code{defvar}. (These
16886arguments are optional.)
16887
16888Each of these arguments consists of a keyword followed by a value.
16889Each keyword starts with the colon character @samp{:}.
16890
16891@need 1250
16892For example, the customizable user option variable
16893@code{text-mode-hook} looks like this:
16894
16895@smallexample
16896@group
16897(defcustom text-mode-hook nil
16898 "Normal hook run when entering Text mode and many related modes."
16899 :type 'hook
16900 :options '(turn-on-auto-fill flyspell-mode)
cfe1c0af 16901 :group 'wp)
8cda6f8f
GM
16902@end group
16903@end smallexample
16904
16905@noindent
16906The name of the variable is @code{text-mode-hook}; it has no default
16907value; and its documentation string tells you what it does.
16908
16909The @code{:type} keyword tells Emacs the kind of data to which
16910@code{text-mode-hook} should be set and how to display the value in a
16911Customization buffer.
16912
16913The @code{:options} keyword specifies a suggested list of values for
16914the variable. Usually, @code{:options} applies to a hook.
16915The list is only a suggestion; it is not exclusive; a person who sets
16916the variable may set it to other values; the list shown following the
16917@code{:options} keyword is intended to offer convenient choices to a
16918user.
16919
16920Finally, the @code{:group} keyword tells the Emacs Customization
16921command in which group the variable is located. This tells where to
16922find it.
16923
09b98a01 16924The @code{defcustom} macro recognizes more than a dozen keywords.
8cda6f8f
GM
16925For more information, see @ref{Customization, , Writing Customization
16926Definitions, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
16927
16928Consider @code{text-mode-hook} as an example.
16929
16930There are two ways to customize this variable. You can use the
16931customization command or write the appropriate expressions yourself.
16932
16933@need 800
16934Using the customization command, you can type:
16935
16936@smallexample
16937M-x customize
16938@end smallexample
16939
16940@noindent
16941and find that the group for editing files of data is called `data'.
16942Enter that group. Text Mode Hook is the first member. You can click
16943on its various options, such as @code{turn-on-auto-fill}, to set the
16944values. After you click on the button to
16945
16946@smallexample
16947Save for Future Sessions
16948@end smallexample
16949
16950@noindent
16951Emacs will write an expression into your @file{.emacs} file.
16952It will look like this:
16953
16954@smallexample
16955@group
16956(custom-set-variables
16957 ;; custom-set-variables was added by Custom.
16958 ;; If you edit it by hand, you could mess it up, so be careful.
16959 ;; Your init file should contain only one such instance.
16960 ;; If there is more than one, they won't work right.
16961 '(text-mode-hook (quote (turn-on-auto-fill text-mode-hook-identify))))
16962@end group
16963@end smallexample
16964
16965@noindent
16966(The @code{text-mode-hook-identify} function tells
16967@code{toggle-text-mode-auto-fill} which buffers are in Text mode.
16968It comes on automatically.)
16969
16970The @code{custom-set-variables} function works somewhat differently
16971than a @code{setq}. While I have never learned the differences, I
16972modify the @code{custom-set-variables} expressions in my @file{.emacs}
16973file by hand: I make the changes in what appears to me to be a
16974reasonable manner and have not had any problems. Others prefer to use
16975the Customization command and let Emacs do the work for them.
16976
16977Another @code{custom-set-@dots{}} function is @code{custom-set-faces}.
16978This function sets the various font faces. Over time, I have set a
16979considerable number of faces. Some of the time, I re-set them using
16980@code{customize}; other times, I simply edit the
16981@code{custom-set-faces} expression in my @file{.emacs} file itself.
16982
16983The second way to customize your @code{text-mode-hook} is to set it
16984yourself in your @file{.emacs} file using code that has nothing to do
16985with the @code{custom-set-@dots{}} functions.
16986
16987@need 800
16988When you do this, and later use @code{customize}, you will see a
16989message that says
16990
16991@smallexample
16992CHANGED outside Customize; operating on it here may be unreliable.
16993@end smallexample
16994
16995@need 800
16996This message is only a warning. If you click on the button to
16997
16998@smallexample
16999Save for Future Sessions
17000@end smallexample
17001
17002@noindent
17003Emacs will write a @code{custom-set-@dots{}} expression near the end
17004of your @file{.emacs} file that will be evaluated after your
17005hand-written expression. It will, therefore, overrule your
17006hand-written expression. No harm will be done. When you do this,
17007however, be careful to remember which expression is active; if you
17008forget, you may confuse yourself.
17009
17010So long as you remember where the values are set, you will have no
17011trouble. In any event, the values are always set in your
17012initialization file, which is usually called @file{.emacs}.
17013
17014I myself use @code{customize} for hardly anything. Mostly, I write
17015expressions myself.
17016
17017@findex defsubst
17018@findex defconst
17019Incidentally, to be more complete concerning defines: @code{defsubst}
17020defines an inline function. The syntax is just like that of
17021@code{defun}. @code{defconst} defines a symbol as a constant. The
17022intent is that neither programs nor users should ever change a value
17023set by @code{defconst}. (You can change it; the value set is a
17024variable; but please do not.)
17025
d6adf7e7 17026@node Beginning a .emacs File
8cda6f8f
GM
17027@section Beginning a @file{.emacs} File
17028@cindex @file{.emacs} file, beginning of
17029
17030When you start Emacs, it loads your @file{.emacs} file unless you tell
17031it not to by specifying @samp{-q} on the command line. (The
17032@code{emacs -q} command gives you a plain, out-of-the-box Emacs.)
17033
17034A @file{.emacs} file contains Lisp expressions. Often, these are no
17035more than expressions to set values; sometimes they are function
17036definitions.
17037
17038@xref{Init File, , The Init File @file{~/.emacs}, emacs, The GNU Emacs
17039Manual}, for a short description of initialization files.
17040
17041This chapter goes over some of the same ground, but is a walk among
17042extracts from a complete, long-used @file{.emacs} file---my own.
17043
17044The first part of the file consists of comments: reminders to myself.
17045By now, of course, I remember these things, but when I started, I did
17046not.
17047
17048@need 1200
17049@smallexample
17050@group
17051;;;; Bob's .emacs file
17052; Robert J. Chassell
17053; 26 September 1985
17054@end group
17055@end smallexample
17056
17057@noindent
17058Look at that date! I started this file a long time ago. I have been
17059adding to it ever since.
17060
17061@smallexample
17062@group
17063; Each section in this file is introduced by a
17064; line beginning with four semicolons; and each
17065; entry is introduced by a line beginning with
17066; three semicolons.
17067@end group
17068@end smallexample
17069
17070@noindent
17071This describes the usual conventions for comments in Emacs Lisp.
17072Everything on a line that follows a semicolon is a comment. Two,
17073three, and four semicolons are used as subsection and section markers.
17074(@xref{Comments, ,, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for
17075more about comments.)
17076
17077@smallexample
17078@group
17079;;;; The Help Key
17080; Control-h is the help key;
17081; after typing control-h, type a letter to
17082; indicate the subject about which you want help.
17083; For an explanation of the help facility,
17084; type control-h two times in a row.
17085@end group
17086@end smallexample
17087
17088@noindent
17089Just remember: type @kbd{C-h} two times for help.
17090
17091@smallexample
17092@group
17093; To find out about any mode, type control-h m
17094; while in that mode. For example, to find out
17095; about mail mode, enter mail mode and then type
17096; control-h m.
17097@end group
17098@end smallexample
17099
17100@noindent
17101`Mode help', as I call this, is very helpful. Usually, it tells you
17102all you need to know.
17103
17104Of course, you don't need to include comments like these in your
17105@file{.emacs} file. I included them in mine because I kept forgetting
17106about Mode help or the conventions for comments---but I was able to
17107remember to look here to remind myself.
17108
d6adf7e7 17109@node Text and Auto-fill
8cda6f8f
GM
17110@section Text and Auto Fill Mode
17111
17112Now we come to the part that `turns on' Text mode and
17113Auto Fill mode.
17114
17115@smallexample
17116@group
17117;;; Text mode and Auto Fill mode
cd61af01
SM
17118;; The next two lines put Emacs into Text mode
17119;; and Auto Fill mode, and are for writers who
17120;; want to start writing prose rather than code.
17121(setq-default major-mode 'text-mode)
8cda6f8f
GM
17122(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
17123@end group
17124@end smallexample
17125
17126Here is the first part of this @file{.emacs} file that does something
17127besides remind a forgetful human!
17128
17129The first of the two lines in parentheses tells Emacs to turn on Text
17130mode when you find a file, @emph{unless} that file should go into some
17131other mode, such as C mode.
17132
17133@cindex Per-buffer, local variables list
17134@cindex Local variables list, per-buffer,
17135@cindex Automatic mode selection
17136@cindex Mode selection, automatic
17137When Emacs reads a file, it looks at the extension to the file name,
17138if any. (The extension is the part that comes after a @samp{.}.) If
17139the file ends with a @samp{.c} or @samp{.h} extension then Emacs turns
17140on C mode. Also, Emacs looks at first nonblank line of the file; if
17141the line says @w{@samp{-*- C -*-}}, Emacs turns on C mode. Emacs
17142possesses a list of extensions and specifications that it uses
17143automatically. In addition, Emacs looks near the last page for a
17144per-buffer, ``local variables list'', if any.
17145
17146@ifinfo
17147@xref{Choosing Modes, , How Major Modes are Chosen, emacs, The GNU
17148Emacs Manual}.
17149
17150@xref{File Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs
17151Manual}.
17152@end ifinfo
17153@iftex
17154See sections ``How Major Modes are Chosen'' and ``Local Variables in
17155Files'' in @cite{The GNU Emacs Manual}.
17156@end iftex
17157
17158Now, back to the @file{.emacs} file.
17159
17160@need 800
17161Here is the line again; how does it work?
17162
17163@cindex Text Mode turned on
17164@smallexample
4e3b4528 17165(setq major-mode 'text-mode)
8cda6f8f
GM
17166@end smallexample
17167
17168@noindent
17169This line is a short, but complete Emacs Lisp expression.
17170
17171We are already familiar with @code{setq}. It sets the following variable,
4e3b4528
SM
17172@code{major-mode}, to the subsequent value, which is @code{text-mode}.
17173The single quote mark before @code{text-mode} tells Emacs to deal directly
17174with the @code{text-mode} symbol, not with whatever it might stand for.
17175@xref{set & setq, , Setting the Value of a Variable},
17176for a reminder of how @code{setq} works.
17177The main point is that there is no difference between the procedure you
17178use to set a value in your @file{.emacs} file and the procedure you use
17179anywhere else in Emacs.
8cda6f8f
GM
17180
17181@need 800
17182Here is the next line:
17183
17184@cindex Auto Fill mode turned on
17185@findex add-hook
17186@smallexample
17187(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fill)
17188@end smallexample
17189
17190@noindent
17191In this line, the @code{add-hook} command adds
17192@code{turn-on-auto-fill} to the variable.
17193
17194@code{turn-on-auto-fill} is the name of a program, that, you guessed
17195it!, turns on Auto Fill mode.
17196
17197Every time Emacs turns on Text mode, Emacs runs the commands `hooked'
17198onto Text mode. So every time Emacs turns on Text mode, Emacs also
17199turns on Auto Fill mode.
17200
17201In brief, the first line causes Emacs to enter Text mode when you edit a
17202file, unless the file name extension, a first non-blank line, or local
17203variables to tell Emacs otherwise.
17204
17205Text mode among other actions, sets the syntax table to work
17206conveniently for writers. In Text mode, Emacs considers an apostrophe
17207as part of a word like a letter; but Emacs does not consider a period
17208or a space as part of a word. Thus, @kbd{M-f} moves you over
17209@samp{it's}. On the other hand, in C mode, @kbd{M-f} stops just after
17210the @samp{t} of @samp{it's}.
17211
17212The second line causes Emacs to turn on Auto Fill mode when it turns
17213on Text mode. In Auto Fill mode, Emacs automatically breaks a line
17214that is too wide and brings the excessively wide part of the line down
17215to the next line. Emacs breaks lines between words, not within them.
17216
17217When Auto Fill mode is turned off, lines continue to the right as you
17218type them. Depending on how you set the value of
17219@code{truncate-lines}, the words you type either disappear off the
17220right side of the screen, or else are shown, in a rather ugly and
17221unreadable manner, as a continuation line on the screen.
17222
17223@need 1250
17224In addition, in this part of my @file{.emacs} file, I tell the Emacs
17225fill commands to insert two spaces after a colon:
17226
17227@smallexample
17228(setq colon-double-space t)
17229@end smallexample
17230
d6adf7e7 17231@node Mail Aliases
8cda6f8f
GM
17232@section Mail Aliases
17233
17234Here is a @code{setq} that `turns on' mail aliases, along with more
17235reminders.
17236
17237@smallexample
17238@group
17239;;; Mail mode
17240; To enter mail mode, type `C-x m'
17241; To enter RMAIL (for reading mail),
17242; type `M-x rmail'
17243(setq mail-aliases t)
17244@end group
17245@end smallexample
17246
17247@cindex Mail aliases
17248@noindent
17249This @code{setq} command sets the value of the variable
17250@code{mail-aliases} to @code{t}. Since @code{t} means true, the line
17251says, in effect, ``Yes, use mail aliases.''
17252
17253Mail aliases are convenient short names for long email addresses or
17254for lists of email addresses. The file where you keep your `aliases'
17255is @file{~/.mailrc}. You write an alias like this:
17256
17257@smallexample
17258alias geo george@@foobar.wiz.edu
17259@end smallexample
17260
17261@noindent
17262When you write a message to George, address it to @samp{geo}; the
17263mailer will automatically expand @samp{geo} to the full address.
17264
d6adf7e7 17265@node Indent Tabs Mode
8cda6f8f
GM
17266@section Indent Tabs Mode
17267@cindex Tabs, preventing
17268@findex indent-tabs-mode
17269
17270By default, Emacs inserts tabs in place of multiple spaces when it
17271formats a region. (For example, you might indent many lines of text
17272all at once with the @code{indent-region} command.) Tabs look fine on
17273a terminal or with ordinary printing, but they produce badly indented
17274output when you use @TeX{} or Texinfo since @TeX{} ignores tabs.
17275
17276@need 1250
17277The following turns off Indent Tabs mode:
17278
17279@smallexample
17280@group
17281;;; Prevent Extraneous Tabs
17282(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil)
17283@end group
17284@end smallexample
17285
17286Note that this line uses @code{setq-default} rather than the
17287@code{setq} command that we have seen before. The @code{setq-default}
17288command sets values only in buffers that do not have their own local
17289values for the variable.
17290
17291@ifinfo
17292@xref{Just Spaces, , Tabs vs. Spaces, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
17293
17294@xref{File Variables, , Local Variables in Files, emacs, The GNU Emacs
17295Manual}.
17296@end ifinfo
17297@iftex
17298See sections ``Tabs vs.@: Spaces'' and ``Local Variables in
17299Files'' in @cite{The GNU Emacs Manual}.
17300@end iftex
17301
17302@need 1700
d6adf7e7 17303@node Keybindings
8cda6f8f
GM
17304@section Some Keybindings
17305
17306Now for some personal keybindings:
17307
17308@smallexample
17309@group
17310;;; Compare windows
17311(global-set-key "\C-cw" 'compare-windows)
17312@end group
17313@end smallexample
17314
17315@findex compare-windows
17316@code{compare-windows} is a nifty command that compares the text in
17317your current window with text in the next window. It makes the
17318comparison by starting at point in each window, moving over text in
17319each window as far as they match. I use this command all the time.
17320
17321This also shows how to set a key globally, for all modes.
17322
17323@cindex Setting a key globally
17324@cindex Global set key
17325@cindex Key setting globally
17326@findex global-set-key
17327The command is @code{global-set-key}. It is followed by the
17328keybinding. In a @file{.emacs} file, the keybinding is written as
17329shown: @code{\C-c} stands for `control-c', which means `press the
17330control key and the @key{c} key at the same time'. The @code{w} means
17331`press the @key{w} key'. The keybinding is surrounded by double
17332quotation marks. In documentation, you would write this as
17333@w{@kbd{C-c w}}. (If you were binding a @key{META} key, such as
17334@kbd{M-c}, rather than a @key{CTRL} key, you would write
17335@w{@code{\M-c}} in your @file{.emacs} file. @xref{Init Rebinding, ,
17336Rebinding Keys in Your Init File, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for
17337details.)
17338
17339The command invoked by the keys is @code{compare-windows}. Note that
17340@code{compare-windows} is preceded by a single quote; otherwise, Emacs
17341would first try to evaluate the symbol to determine its value.
17342
17343These three things, the double quotation marks, the backslash before
17344the @samp{C}, and the single quote mark are necessary parts of
17345keybinding that I tend to forget. Fortunately, I have come to
17346remember that I should look at my existing @file{.emacs} file, and
17347adapt what is there.
17348
17349As for the keybinding itself: @kbd{C-c w}. This combines the prefix
17350key, @kbd{C-c}, with a single character, in this case, @kbd{w}. This
17351set of keys, @kbd{C-c} followed by a single character, is strictly
17352reserved for individuals' own use. (I call these `own' keys, since
17353these are for my own use.) You should always be able to create such a
17354keybinding for your own use without stomping on someone else's
17355keybinding. If you ever write an extension to Emacs, please avoid
17356taking any of these keys for public use. Create a key like @kbd{C-c
17357C-w} instead. Otherwise, we will run out of `own' keys.
17358
17359@need 1250
17360Here is another keybinding, with a comment:
17361
17362@smallexample
17363@group
17364;;; Keybinding for `occur'
17365; I use occur a lot, so let's bind it to a key:
17366(global-set-key "\C-co" 'occur)
17367@end group
17368@end smallexample
17369
17370@findex occur
17371The @code{occur} command shows all the lines in the current buffer
17372that contain a match for a regular expression. Matching lines are
17373shown in a buffer called @file{*Occur*}. That buffer serves as a menu
17374to jump to occurrences.
17375
17376@findex global-unset-key
17377@cindex Unbinding key
17378@cindex Key unbinding
17379@need 1250
17380Here is how to unbind a key, so it does not
17381work:
17382
17383@smallexample
17384@group
17385;;; Unbind `C-x f'
17386(global-unset-key "\C-xf")
17387@end group
17388@end smallexample
17389
17390There is a reason for this unbinding: I found I inadvertently typed
17391@w{@kbd{C-x f}} when I meant to type @kbd{C-x C-f}. Rather than find a
17392file, as I intended, I accidentally set the width for filled text,
17393almost always to a width I did not want. Since I hardly ever reset my
17394default width, I simply unbound the key.
17395
17396@findex list-buffers, @r{rebound}
17397@findex buffer-menu, @r{bound to key}
17398@need 1250
17399The following rebinds an existing key:
17400
17401@smallexample
17402@group
17403;;; Rebind `C-x C-b' for `buffer-menu'
17404(global-set-key "\C-x\C-b" 'buffer-menu)
17405@end group
17406@end smallexample
17407
17408By default, @kbd{C-x C-b} runs the
17409@code{list-buffers} command. This command lists
17410your buffers in @emph{another} window. Since I
17411almost always want to do something in that
17412window, I prefer the @code{buffer-menu}
17413command, which not only lists the buffers,
17414but moves point into that window.
17415
d6adf7e7 17416@node Keymaps
8cda6f8f
GM
17417@section Keymaps
17418@cindex Keymaps
17419@cindex Rebinding keys
17420
17421Emacs uses @dfn{keymaps} to record which keys call which commands.
17422When you use @code{global-set-key} to set the keybinding for a single
17423command in all parts of Emacs, you are specifying the keybinding in
17424@code{current-global-map}.
17425
17426Specific modes, such as C mode or Text mode, have their own keymaps;
17427the mode-specific keymaps override the global map that is shared by
17428all buffers.
17429
17430The @code{global-set-key} function binds, or rebinds, the global
17431keymap. For example, the following binds the key @kbd{C-x C-b} to the
17432function @code{buffer-menu}:
17433
17434@smallexample
17435(global-set-key "\C-x\C-b" 'buffer-menu)
17436@end smallexample
17437
17438Mode-specific keymaps are bound using the @code{define-key} function,
17439which takes a specific keymap as an argument, as well as the key and
17440the command. For example, my @file{.emacs} file contains the
17441following expression to bind the @code{texinfo-insert-@@group} command
17442to @kbd{C-c C-c g}:
17443
17444@smallexample
17445@group
17446(define-key texinfo-mode-map "\C-c\C-cg" 'texinfo-insert-@@group)
17447@end group
17448@end smallexample
17449
17450@noindent
17451The @code{texinfo-insert-@@group} function itself is a little extension
17452to Texinfo mode that inserts @samp{@@group} into a Texinfo file. I
17453use this command all the time and prefer to type the three strokes
17454@kbd{C-c C-c g} rather than the six strokes @kbd{@@ g r o u p}.
17455(@samp{@@group} and its matching @samp{@@end group} are commands that
17456keep all enclosed text together on one page; many multi-line examples
17457in this book are surrounded by @samp{@@group @dots{} @@end group}.)
17458
17459@need 1250
17460Here is the @code{texinfo-insert-@@group} function definition:
17461
17462@smallexample
17463@group
17464(defun texinfo-insert-@@group ()
17465 "Insert the string @@group in a Texinfo buffer."
17466 (interactive)
17467 (beginning-of-line)
17468 (insert "@@group\n"))
17469@end group
17470@end smallexample
17471
17472(Of course, I could have used Abbrev mode to save typing, rather than
17473write a function to insert a word; but I prefer key strokes consistent
17474with other Texinfo mode key bindings.)
17475
17476You will see numerous @code{define-key} expressions in
17477@file{loaddefs.el} as well as in the various mode libraries, such as
17478@file{cc-mode.el} and @file{lisp-mode.el}.
17479
17480@xref{Key Bindings, , Customizing Key Bindings, emacs, The GNU Emacs
17481Manual}, and @ref{Keymaps, , Keymaps, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
17482Reference Manual}, for more information about keymaps.
17483
d6adf7e7 17484@node Loading Files
8cda6f8f
GM
17485@section Loading Files
17486@cindex Loading files
17487@c findex load
17488
17489Many people in the GNU Emacs community have written extensions to
17490Emacs. As time goes by, these extensions are often included in new
17491releases. For example, the Calendar and Diary packages are now part
17492of the standard GNU Emacs, as is Calc.
17493
17494You can use a @code{load} command to evaluate a complete file and
17495thereby install all the functions and variables in the file into Emacs.
17496For example:
17497
17498@c (auto-compression-mode t)
17499
17500@smallexample
17501(load "~/emacs/slowsplit")
17502@end smallexample
17503
1df7defd 17504This evaluates, i.e., loads, the @file{slowsplit.el} file or if it
8cda6f8f
GM
17505exists, the faster, byte compiled @file{slowsplit.elc} file from the
17506@file{emacs} sub-directory of your home directory. The file contains
17507the function @code{split-window-quietly}, which John Robinson wrote in
175081989.
17509
17510The @code{split-window-quietly} function splits a window with the
17511minimum of redisplay. I installed it in 1989 because it worked well
17512with the slow 1200 baud terminals I was then using. Nowadays, I only
17513occasionally come across such a slow connection, but I continue to use
17514the function because I like the way it leaves the bottom half of a
17515buffer in the lower of the new windows and the top half in the upper
17516window.
17517
17518@need 1250
17519To replace the key binding for the default
17520@code{split-window-vertically}, you must also unset that key and bind
17521the keys to @code{split-window-quietly}, like this:
17522
17523@smallexample
17524@group
17525(global-unset-key "\C-x2")
17526(global-set-key "\C-x2" 'split-window-quietly)
17527@end group
17528@end smallexample
17529
17530@vindex load-path
17531If you load many extensions, as I do, then instead of specifying the
17532exact location of the extension file, as shown above, you can specify
44e97401 17533that directory as part of Emacs's @code{load-path}. Then, when Emacs
8cda6f8f
GM
17534loads a file, it will search that directory as well as its default
17535list of directories. (The default list is specified in @file{paths.h}
17536when Emacs is built.)
17537
17538@need 1250
17539The following command adds your @file{~/emacs} directory to the
17540existing load path:
17541
17542@smallexample
17543@group
17544;;; Emacs Load Path
17545(setq load-path (cons "~/emacs" load-path))
17546@end group
17547@end smallexample
17548
17549Incidentally, @code{load-library} is an interactive interface to the
17550@code{load} function. The complete function looks like this:
17551
17552@findex load-library
17553@smallexample
17554@group
17555(defun load-library (library)
17556 "Load the library named LIBRARY.
17557This is an interface to the function `load'."
17558 (interactive
17559 (list (completing-read "Load library: "
e0e10d9d 17560 (apply-partially 'locate-file-completion-table
f51f97dd
SM
17561 load-path
17562 (get-load-suffixes)))))
8cda6f8f
GM
17563 (load library))
17564@end group
17565@end smallexample
17566
17567The name of the function, @code{load-library}, comes from the use of
17568`library' as a conventional synonym for `file'. The source for the
17569@code{load-library} command is in the @file{files.el} library.
17570
17571Another interactive command that does a slightly different job is
17572@code{load-file}. @xref{Lisp Libraries, , Libraries of Lisp Code for
17573Emacs, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}, for information on the
17574distinction between @code{load-library} and this command.
17575
d6adf7e7 17576@node Autoload
8cda6f8f
GM
17577@section Autoloading
17578@findex autoload
17579
17580Instead of installing a function by loading the file that contains it,
17581or by evaluating the function definition, you can make the function
17582available but not actually install it until it is first called. This
17583is called @dfn{autoloading}.
17584
17585When you execute an autoloaded function, Emacs automatically evaluates
17586the file that contains the definition, and then calls the function.
17587
17588Emacs starts quicker with autoloaded functions, since their libraries
17589are not loaded right away; but you need to wait a moment when you
17590first use such a function, while its containing file is evaluated.
17591
17592Rarely used functions are frequently autoloaded. The
17593@file{loaddefs.el} library contains hundreds of autoloaded functions,
17594from @code{bookmark-set} to @code{wordstar-mode}. Of course, you may
17595come to use a `rare' function frequently. When you do, you should
17596load that function's file with a @code{load} expression in your
17597@file{.emacs} file.
17598
17599In my @file{.emacs} file, I load 14 libraries that contain functions
17600that would otherwise be autoloaded. (Actually, it would have been
17601better to include these files in my `dumped' Emacs, but I forgot.
17602@xref{Building Emacs, , Building Emacs, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
17603Reference Manual}, and the @file{INSTALL} file for more about
17604dumping.)
17605
17606You may also want to include autoloaded expressions in your @file{.emacs}
17607file. @code{autoload} is a built-in function that takes up to five
17608arguments, the final three of which are optional. The first argument
17609is the name of the function to be autoloaded; the second is the name
17610of the file to be loaded. The third argument is documentation for the
17611function, and the fourth tells whether the function can be called
17612interactively. The fifth argument tells what type of
17613object---@code{autoload} can handle a keymap or macro as well as a
17614function (the default is a function).
17615
17616@need 800
17617Here is a typical example:
17618
17619@smallexample
17620@group
17621(autoload 'html-helper-mode
17622 "html-helper-mode" "Edit HTML documents" t)
17623@end group
17624@end smallexample
17625
17626@noindent
17627(@code{html-helper-mode} is an older alternative to @code{html-mode},
17628which is a standard part of the distribution.)
17629
17630@noindent
17631This expression autoloads the @code{html-helper-mode} function. It
17632takes it from the @file{html-helper-mode.el} file (or from the byte
a9097c6d
KB
17633compiled version @file{html-helper-mode.elc}, if that exists.) The
17634file must be located in a directory specified by @code{load-path}.
17635The documentation says that this is a mode to help you edit documents
8cda6f8f
GM
17636written in the HyperText Markup Language. You can call this mode
17637interactively by typing @kbd{M-x html-helper-mode}. (You need to
17638duplicate the function's regular documentation in the autoload
17639expression because the regular function is not yet loaded, so its
17640documentation is not available.)
17641
17642@xref{Autoload, , Autoload, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
17643Manual}, for more information.
17644
d6adf7e7 17645@node Simple Extension
8cda6f8f
GM
17646@section A Simple Extension: @code{line-to-top-of-window}
17647@findex line-to-top-of-window
17648@cindex Simple extension in @file{.emacs} file
17649
17650Here is a simple extension to Emacs that moves the line point is on to
17651the top of the window. I use this all the time, to make text easier
17652to read.
17653
17654You can put the following code into a separate file and then load it
17655from your @file{.emacs} file, or you can include it within your
17656@file{.emacs} file.
17657
17658@need 1250
17659Here is the definition:
17660
17661@smallexample
17662@group
17663;;; Line to top of window;
17664;;; replace three keystroke sequence C-u 0 C-l
17665(defun line-to-top-of-window ()
17666 "Move the line point is on to top of window."
17667 (interactive)
17668 (recenter 0))
17669@end group
17670@end smallexample
17671
17672@need 1250
17673Now for the keybinding.
17674
17675Nowadays, function keys as well as mouse button events and
17676non-@sc{ascii} characters are written within square brackets, without
17677quotation marks. (In Emacs version 18 and before, you had to write
17678different function key bindings for each different make of terminal.)
17679
17680I bind @code{line-to-top-of-window} to my @key{F6} function key like
17681this:
17682
17683@smallexample
17684(global-set-key [f6] 'line-to-top-of-window)
17685@end smallexample
17686
17687For more information, see @ref{Init Rebinding, , Rebinding Keys in
17688Your Init File, emacs, The GNU Emacs Manual}.
17689
17690@cindex Conditional 'twixt two versions of Emacs
17691@cindex Version of Emacs, choosing
17692@cindex Emacs version, choosing
6dd28193 17693If you run two versions of GNU Emacs, such as versions 22 and 23, and
8cda6f8f
GM
17694use one @file{.emacs} file, you can select which code to evaluate with
17695the following conditional:
17696
17697@smallexample
17698@group
17699(cond
6dd28193 17700 ((= 22 emacs-major-version)
8cda6f8f 17701 ;; evaluate version 22 code
6dd28193
CY
17702 ( @dots{} ))
17703 ((= 23 emacs-major-version)
17704 ;; evaluate version 23 code
8cda6f8f
GM
17705 ( @dots{} )))
17706@end group
17707@end smallexample
17708
8f4ea8e0 17709For example, recent versions blink
8cda6f8f
GM
17710their cursors by default. I hate such blinking, as well as other
17711features, so I placed the following in my @file{.emacs}
17712file@footnote{When I start instances of Emacs that do not load my
17713@file{.emacs} file or any site file, I also turn off blinking:
17714
17715@smallexample
17716emacs -q --no-site-file -eval '(blink-cursor-mode nil)'
17717
17718@exdent Or nowadays, using an even more sophisticated set of options,
17719
9450ac06 17720emacs -Q -D
8cda6f8f
GM
17721@end smallexample
17722}:
17723
17724@smallexample
17725@group
6dd28193
CY
17726(when (>= emacs-major-version 21)
17727 (blink-cursor-mode 0)
17728 ;; Insert newline when you press `C-n' (next-line)
17729 ;; at the end of the buffer
17730 (setq next-line-add-newlines t)
8cda6f8f
GM
17731@end group
17732@group
6dd28193
CY
17733 ;; Turn on image viewing
17734 (auto-image-file-mode t)
8cda6f8f
GM
17735@end group
17736@group
6dd28193
CY
17737 ;; Turn on menu bar (this bar has text)
17738 ;; (Use numeric argument to turn on)
17739 (menu-bar-mode 1)
8cda6f8f
GM
17740@end group
17741@group
6dd28193
CY
17742 ;; Turn off tool bar (this bar has icons)
17743 ;; (Use numeric argument to turn on)
17744 (tool-bar-mode nil)
8cda6f8f 17745@end group
8cda6f8f 17746@group
6dd28193
CY
17747 ;; Turn off tooltip mode for tool bar
17748 ;; (This mode causes icon explanations to pop up)
17749 ;; (Use numeric argument to turn on)
17750 (tooltip-mode nil)
17751 ;; If tooltips turned on, make tips appear promptly
17752 (setq tooltip-delay 0.1) ; default is 0.7 second
17753 )
8cda6f8f
GM
17754@end group
17755@end smallexample
17756
d6adf7e7 17757@node X11 Colors
8cda6f8f
GM
17758@section X11 Colors
17759
17760You can specify colors when you use Emacs with the MIT X Windowing
17761system.
17762
17763I dislike the default colors and specify my own.
17764
17765@need 1250
17766Here are the expressions in my @file{.emacs}
17767file that set values:
17768
17769@smallexample
17770@group
17771;; Set cursor color
17772(set-cursor-color "white")
17773
17774;; Set mouse color
17775(set-mouse-color "white")
17776
17777;; Set foreground and background
17778(set-foreground-color "white")
17779(set-background-color "darkblue")
17780@end group
17781
17782@group
17783;;; Set highlighting colors for isearch and drag
17784(set-face-foreground 'highlight "white")
17785(set-face-background 'highlight "blue")
17786@end group
17787
17788@group
17789(set-face-foreground 'region "cyan")
17790(set-face-background 'region "blue")
17791@end group
17792
17793@group
17794(set-face-foreground 'secondary-selection "skyblue")
17795(set-face-background 'secondary-selection "darkblue")
17796@end group
17797
17798@group
17799;; Set calendar highlighting colors
17800(setq calendar-load-hook
d1069532
SM
17801 (lambda ()
17802 (set-face-foreground 'diary-face "skyblue")
17803 (set-face-background 'holiday-face "slate blue")
17804 (set-face-foreground 'holiday-face "white")))
8cda6f8f
GM
17805@end group
17806@end smallexample
17807
17808The various shades of blue soothe my eye and prevent me from seeing
17809the screen flicker.
17810
17811Alternatively, I could have set my specifications in various X
17812initialization files. For example, I could set the foreground,
17813background, cursor, and pointer (i.e., mouse) colors in my
17814@file{~/.Xresources} file like this:
17815
17816@smallexample
17817@group
17818Emacs*foreground: white
17819Emacs*background: darkblue
17820Emacs*cursorColor: white
17821Emacs*pointerColor: white
17822@end group
17823@end smallexample
17824
17825In any event, since it is not part of Emacs, I set the root color of
17826my X window in my @file{~/.xinitrc} file, like this@footnote{I also
17827run more modern window managers, such as Enlightenment, Gnome, or KDE;
17828in those cases, I often specify an image rather than a plain color.}:
17829
17830@smallexample
17831xsetroot -solid Navy -fg white &
17832@end smallexample
17833
17834@need 1700
d6adf7e7 17835@node Miscellaneous
8cda6f8f
GM
17836@section Miscellaneous Settings for a @file{.emacs} File
17837
17838@need 1250
17839Here are a few miscellaneous settings:
17840@sp 1
17841
17842@itemize @minus
17843@item
17844Set the shape and color of the mouse cursor:
17845
17846@smallexample
17847@group
17848; Cursor shapes are defined in
17849; `/usr/include/X11/cursorfont.h';
17850; for example, the `target' cursor is number 128;
17851; the `top_left_arrow' cursor is number 132.
17852@end group
17853
17854@group
17855(let ((mpointer (x-get-resource "*mpointer"
17856 "*emacs*mpointer")))
17857 ;; If you have not set your mouse pointer
17858 ;; then set it, otherwise leave as is:
17859 (if (eq mpointer nil)
17860 (setq mpointer "132")) ; top_left_arrow
17861@end group
17862@group
17863 (setq x-pointer-shape (string-to-int mpointer))
17864 (set-mouse-color "white"))
17865@end group
17866@end smallexample
17867
17868@item
17869Or you can set the values of a variety of features in an alist, like
17870this:
17871
17872@smallexample
17873@group
17874(setq-default
17875 default-frame-alist
17876 '((cursor-color . "white")
17877 (mouse-color . "white")
17878 (foreground-color . "white")
17879 (background-color . "DodgerBlue4")
17880 ;; (cursor-type . bar)
17881 (cursor-type . box)
17882@end group
17883@group
17884 (tool-bar-lines . 0)
17885 (menu-bar-lines . 1)
17886 (width . 80)
17887 (height . 58)
17888 (font .
17889 "-Misc-Fixed-Medium-R-Normal--20-200-75-75-C-100-ISO8859-1")
17890 ))
17891@end group
17892@end smallexample
17893
17894@item
17895Convert @kbd{@key{CTRL}-h} into @key{DEL} and @key{DEL}
17896into @kbd{@key{CTRL}-h}.@*
17897(Some older keyboards needed this, although I have not seen the
17898problem recently.)
17899
17900@smallexample
17901@group
17902;; Translate `C-h' to <DEL>.
17903; (keyboard-translate ?\C-h ?\C-?)
17904
17905;; Translate <DEL> to `C-h'.
17906(keyboard-translate ?\C-? ?\C-h)
17907@end group
17908@end smallexample
17909
17910@item Turn off a blinking cursor!
17911
17912@smallexample
17913@group
17914(if (fboundp 'blink-cursor-mode)
17915 (blink-cursor-mode -1))
17916@end group
17917@end smallexample
17918
17919@noindent
17920or start GNU Emacs with the command @code{emacs -nbc}.
17921
17922@need 1250
17923@item When using `grep'@*
17924@samp{-i}@w{ } Ignore case distinctions@*
17925@samp{-n}@w{ } Prefix each line of output with line number@*
17926@samp{-H}@w{ } Print the filename for each match.@*
17927@samp{-e}@w{ } Protect patterns beginning with a hyphen character, @samp{-}
17928
17929@smallexample
17930(setq grep-command "grep -i -nH -e ")
17931@end smallexample
17932
17933@ignore
17934@c Evidently, no longer needed in GNU Emacs 22
17935
17936item Automatically uncompress compressed files when visiting them
17937
17938smallexample
17939(load "uncompress")
17940end smallexample
17941
17942@end ignore
17943
17944@item Find an existing buffer, even if it has a different name@*
17945This avoids problems with symbolic links.
17946
17947@smallexample
17948(setq find-file-existing-other-name t)
17949@end smallexample
17950
17951@item Set your language environment and default input method
17952
17953@smallexample
17954@group
17955(set-language-environment "latin-1")
17956;; Remember you can enable or disable multilingual text input
17957;; with the @code{toggle-input-method'} (@kbd{C-\}) command
17958(setq default-input-method "latin-1-prefix")
17959@end group
17960@end smallexample
17961
17962If you want to write with Chinese `GB' characters, set this instead:
17963
17964@smallexample
17965@group
17966(set-language-environment "Chinese-GB")
17967(setq default-input-method "chinese-tonepy")
17968@end group
17969@end smallexample
17970@end itemize
17971
17972@subsubheading Fixing Unpleasant Key Bindings
17973@cindex Key bindings, fixing
17974@cindex Bindings, key, fixing unpleasant
17975
17976Some systems bind keys unpleasantly. Sometimes, for example, the
17977@key{CTRL} key appears in an awkward spot rather than at the far left
17978of the home row.
17979
17980Usually, when people fix these sorts of keybindings, they do not
17981change their @file{~/.emacs} file. Instead, they bind the proper keys
17982on their consoles with the @code{loadkeys} or @code{install-keymap}
17983commands in their boot script and then include @code{xmodmap} commands
17984in their @file{.xinitrc} or @file{.Xsession} file for X Windows.
17985
17986@need 1250
17987@noindent
17988For a boot script:
17989
17990@smallexample
17991@group
17992loadkeys /usr/share/keymaps/i386/qwerty/emacs2.kmap.gz
17993@exdent or
17994install-keymap emacs2
17995@end group
17996@end smallexample
17997
17998@need 1250
17999@noindent
18000For a @file{.xinitrc} or @file{.Xsession} file when the @key{Caps
18001Lock} key is at the far left of the home row:
18002
18003@smallexample
18004@group
18005# Bind the key labeled `Caps Lock' to `Control'
18006# (Such a broken user interface suggests that keyboard manufacturers
18007# think that computers are typewriters from 1885.)
18008
18009xmodmap -e "clear Lock"
18010xmodmap -e "add Control = Caps_Lock"
18011@end group
18012@end smallexample
18013
18014@need 1250
18015@noindent
18016In a @file{.xinitrc} or @file{.Xsession} file, to convert an @key{ALT}
18017key to a @key{META} key:
18018
18019@smallexample
18020@group
18021# Some ill designed keyboards have a key labeled ALT and no Meta
18022xmodmap -e "keysym Alt_L = Meta_L Alt_L"
18023@end group
18024@end smallexample
18025
18026@need 1700
d6adf7e7 18027@node Mode Line
8cda6f8f 18028@section A Modified Mode Line
cd61af01 18029@vindex mode-line-format
8cda6f8f
GM
18030@cindex Mode line format
18031
18032Finally, a feature I really like: a modified mode line.
18033
18034When I work over a network, I forget which machine I am using. Also,
18035I tend to I lose track of where I am, and which line point is on.
18036
18037So I reset my mode line to look like this:
18038
18039@smallexample
18040-:-- foo.texi rattlesnake:/home/bob/ Line 1 (Texinfo Fill) Top
18041@end smallexample
18042
18043I am visiting a file called @file{foo.texi}, on my machine
18044@file{rattlesnake} in my @file{/home/bob} buffer. I am on line 1, in
18045Texinfo mode, and am at the top of the buffer.
18046
18047@need 1200
18048My @file{.emacs} file has a section that looks like this:
18049
18050@smallexample
18051@group
18052;; Set a Mode Line that tells me which machine, which directory,
18053;; and which line I am on, plus the other customary information.
cd61af01 18054(setq-default mode-line-format
8cda6f8f
GM
18055 (quote
18056 (#("-" 0 1
18057 (help-echo
18058 "mouse-1: select window, mouse-2: delete others ..."))
18059 mode-line-mule-info
18060 mode-line-modified
18061 mode-line-frame-identification
18062 " "
18063@end group
18064@group
18065 mode-line-buffer-identification
18066 " "
18067 (:eval (substring
18068 (system-name) 0 (string-match "\\..+" (system-name))))
18069 ":"
18070 default-directory
18071 #(" " 0 1
18072 (help-echo
18073 "mouse-1: select window, mouse-2: delete others ..."))
18074 (line-number-mode " Line %l ")
18075 global-mode-string
18076@end group
18077@group
18078 #(" %[(" 0 6
18079 (help-echo
18080 "mouse-1: select window, mouse-2: delete others ..."))
18081 (:eval (mode-line-mode-name))
18082 mode-line-process
18083 minor-mode-alist
18084 #("%n" 0 2 (help-echo "mouse-2: widen" local-map (keymap ...)))
18085 ")%] "
18086 (-3 . "%P")
18087 ;; "-%-"
18088 )))
18089@end group
18090@end smallexample
18091
18092@noindent
18093Here, I redefine the default mode line. Most of the parts are from
18094the original; but I make a few changes. I set the @emph{default} mode
18095line format so as to permit various modes, such as Info, to override
18096it.
18097
18098Many elements in the list are self-explanatory:
18099@code{mode-line-modified} is a variable that tells whether the buffer
18100has been modified, @code{mode-name} tells the name of the mode, and so
18101on. However, the format looks complicated because of two features we
18102have not discussed.
18103
18104@cindex Properties, in mode line example
18105The first string in the mode line is a dash or hyphen, @samp{-}. In
18106the old days, it would have been specified simply as @code{"-"}. But
18107nowadays, Emacs can add properties to a string, such as highlighting
18108or, as in this case, a help feature. If you place your mouse cursor
18109over the hyphen, some help information appears (By default, you must
18110wait seven-tenths of a second before the information appears. You can
18111change that timing by changing the value of @code{tooltip-delay}.)
18112
18113@need 1000
18114The new string format has a special syntax:
18115
18116@smallexample
18117#("-" 0 1 (help-echo "mouse-1: select window, ..."))
18118@end smallexample
18119
18120@noindent
18121The @code{#(} begins a list. The first element of the list is the
18122string itself, just one @samp{-}. The second and third
18123elements specify the range over which the fourth element applies. A
18124range starts @emph{after} a character, so a zero means the range
18125starts just before the first character; a 1 means that the range ends
18126just after the first character. The third element is the property for
18127the range. It consists of a property list, a
18128property name, in this case, @samp{help-echo}, followed by a value, in this
18129case, a string. The second, third, and fourth elements of this new
18130string format can be repeated.
18131
18132@xref{Text Properties, , Text Properties, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
18133Reference Manual}, and see @ref{Mode Line Format, , Mode Line Format,
18134elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for more information.
18135
18136@code{mode-line-buffer-identification}
18137displays the current buffer name. It is a list
18138beginning @code{(#("%12b" 0 4 @dots{}}.
18139The @code{#(} begins the list.
18140
18141The @samp{"%12b"} displays the current buffer name, using the
18142@code{buffer-name} function with which we are familiar; the `12'
18143specifies the maximum number of characters that will be displayed.
18144When a name has fewer characters, whitespace is added to fill out to
18145this number. (Buffer names can and often should be longer than 12
18146characters; this length works well in a typical 80 column wide
18147window.)
18148
18149@code{:eval} says to evaluate the following form and use the result as
18150a string to display. In this case, the expression displays the first
18151component of the full system name. The end of the first component is
18152a @samp{.} (`period'), so I use the @code{string-match} function to
18153tell me the length of the first component. The substring from the
18154zeroth character to that length is the name of the machine.
18155
18156@need 1250
18157This is the expression:
18158
18159@smallexample
18160@group
18161(:eval (substring
18162 (system-name) 0 (string-match "\\..+" (system-name))))
18163@end group
18164@end smallexample
18165
18166@samp{%[} and @samp{%]} cause a pair of square brackets
18167to appear for each recursive editing level. @samp{%n} says `Narrow'
18168when narrowing is in effect. @samp{%P} tells you the percentage of
18169the buffer that is above the bottom of the window, or `Top', `Bottom',
18170or `All'. (A lower case @samp{p} tell you the percentage above the
18171@emph{top} of the window.) @samp{%-} inserts enough dashes to fill
18172out the line.
18173
f99f1641 18174Remember, ``You don't have to like Emacs to like it''---your own
8cda6f8f
GM
18175Emacs can have different colors, different commands, and different
18176keys than a default Emacs.
18177
18178On the other hand, if you want to bring up a plain `out of the box'
18179Emacs, with no customization, type:
18180
18181@smallexample
18182emacs -q
18183@end smallexample
18184
18185@noindent
18186This will start an Emacs that does @emph{not} load your
18187@file{~/.emacs} initialization file. A plain, default Emacs. Nothing
18188more.
18189
d6adf7e7 18190@node Debugging
8cda6f8f
GM
18191@chapter Debugging
18192@cindex debugging
18193
18194GNU Emacs has two debuggers, @code{debug} and @code{edebug}. The
18195first is built into the internals of Emacs and is always with you;
18196the second requires that you instrument a function before you can use it.
18197
18198Both debuggers are described extensively in @ref{Debugging, ,
18199Debugging Lisp Programs, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
18200In this chapter, I will walk through a short example of each.
18201
18202@menu
18203* debug:: How to use the built-in debugger.
18204* debug-on-entry:: Start debugging when you call a function.
18205* debug-on-quit:: Start debugging when you quit with @kbd{C-g}.
18206* edebug:: How to use Edebug, a source level debugger.
18207* Debugging Exercises::
18208@end menu
18209
d6adf7e7 18210@node debug
8cda6f8f
GM
18211@section @code{debug}
18212@findex debug
18213
18214Suppose you have written a function definition that is intended to
18215return the sum of the numbers 1 through a given number. (This is the
18216@code{triangle} function discussed earlier. @xref{Decrementing
18217Example, , Example with Decrementing Counter}, for a discussion.)
18218@c xref{Decrementing Loop,, Loop with a Decrementing Counter}, for a discussion.)
18219
18220However, your function definition has a bug. You have mistyped
18221@samp{1=} for @samp{1-}. Here is the broken definition:
18222
18223@findex triangle-bugged
18224@smallexample
18225@group
18226(defun triangle-bugged (number)
18227 "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive."
18228 (let ((total 0))
18229 (while (> number 0)
18230 (setq total (+ total number))
18231 (setq number (1= number))) ; @r{Error here.}
18232 total))
18233@end group
18234@end smallexample
18235
18236If you are reading this in Info, you can evaluate this definition in
18237the normal fashion. You will see @code{triangle-bugged} appear in the
18238echo area.
18239
18240@need 1250
18241Now evaluate the @code{triangle-bugged} function with an
18242argument of 4:
18243
18244@smallexample
18245(triangle-bugged 4)
18246@end smallexample
18247
18248@noindent
18249In a recent GNU Emacs, you will create and enter a @file{*Backtrace*}
18250buffer that says:
18251
18252@noindent
18253@smallexample
18254@group
18255---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18256Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function 1=)
18257 (1= number)
18258 (setq number (1= number))
18259 (while (> number 0) (setq total (+ total number))
18260 (setq number (1= number)))
18261 (let ((total 0)) (while (> number 0) (setq total ...)
18262 (setq number ...)) total)
18263 triangle-bugged(4)
18264@end group
18265@group
18266 eval((triangle-bugged 4))
18267 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
18268 eval-last-sexp(nil)
18269 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
18270---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18271@end group
18272@end smallexample
18273
18274@noindent
18275(I have reformatted this example slightly; the debugger does not fold
18276long lines. As usual, you can quit the debugger by typing @kbd{q} in
18277the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer.)
18278
18279In practice, for a bug as simple as this, the `Lisp error' line will
18280tell you what you need to know to correct the definition. The
18281function @code{1=} is `void'.
18282
18283@ignore
18284@need 800
18285In GNU Emacs 20 and before, you will see:
18286
18287@smallexample
18288Symbol's function definition is void:@: 1=
18289@end smallexample
18290
18291@noindent
18292which has the same meaning as the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer line in
18293version 21.
18294@end ignore
18295
18296However, suppose you are not quite certain what is going on?
18297You can read the complete backtrace.
18298
18299In this case, you need to run a recent GNU Emacs, which automatically
18300starts the debugger that puts you in the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer; or
18301else, you need to start the debugger manually as described below.
18302
18303Read the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer from the bottom up; it tells you
18304what Emacs did that led to the error. Emacs made an interactive call
18305to @kbd{C-x C-e} (@code{eval-last-sexp}), which led to the evaluation
18306of the @code{triangle-bugged} expression. Each line above tells you
18307what the Lisp interpreter evaluated next.
18308
18309@need 1250
18310The third line from the top of the buffer is
18311
18312@smallexample
18313(setq number (1= number))
18314@end smallexample
18315
18316@noindent
18317Emacs tried to evaluate this expression; in order to do so, it tried
18318to evaluate the inner expression shown on the second line from the
18319top:
18320
18321@smallexample
18322(1= number)
18323@end smallexample
18324
18325@need 1250
18326@noindent
18327This is where the error occurred; as the top line says:
18328
18329@smallexample
18330Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function 1=)
18331@end smallexample
18332
18333@noindent
18334You can correct the mistake, re-evaluate the function definition, and
18335then run your test again.
18336
d6adf7e7 18337@node debug-on-entry
8cda6f8f
GM
18338@section @code{debug-on-entry}
18339@findex debug-on-entry
18340
18341A recent GNU Emacs starts the debugger automatically when your
18342function has an error.
18343
18344@ignore
18345GNU Emacs version 20 and before did not; it simply
18346presented you with an error message. You had to start the debugger
18347manually.
18348@end ignore
18349
18350Incidentally, you can start the debugger manually for all versions of
18351Emacs; the advantage is that the debugger runs even if you do not have
18352a bug in your code. Sometimes your code will be free of bugs!
18353
18354You can enter the debugger when you call the function by calling
18355@code{debug-on-entry}.
18356
18357@need 1250
18358@noindent
18359Type:
18360
18361@smallexample
18362M-x debug-on-entry RET triangle-bugged RET
18363@end smallexample
18364
18365@need 1250
18366@noindent
18367Now, evaluate the following:
18368
18369@smallexample
18370(triangle-bugged 5)
18371@end smallexample
18372
18373@noindent
18374All versions of Emacs will create a @file{*Backtrace*} buffer and tell
18375you that it is beginning to evaluate the @code{triangle-bugged}
18376function:
18377
18378@smallexample
18379@group
18380---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18381Debugger entered--entering a function:
18382* triangle-bugged(5)
18383 eval((triangle-bugged 5))
18384@end group
18385@group
18386 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
18387 eval-last-sexp(nil)
18388 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
18389---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18390@end group
18391@end smallexample
18392
18393In the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer, type @kbd{d}. Emacs will evaluate
18394the first expression in @code{triangle-bugged}; the buffer will look
18395like this:
18396
18397@smallexample
18398@group
18399---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18400Debugger entered--beginning evaluation of function call form:
18401* (let ((total 0)) (while (> number 0) (setq total ...)
18402 (setq number ...)) total)
18403* triangle-bugged(5)
18404 eval((triangle-bugged 5))
18405@end group
18406@group
18407 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
18408 eval-last-sexp(nil)
18409 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
18410---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18411@end group
18412@end smallexample
18413
18414@noindent
18415Now, type @kbd{d} again, eight times, slowly. Each time you type
18416@kbd{d}, Emacs will evaluate another expression in the function
18417definition.
18418
18419@need 1750
18420Eventually, the buffer will look like this:
18421
18422@smallexample
18423@group
18424---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18425Debugger entered--beginning evaluation of function call form:
18426* (setq number (1= number))
18427* (while (> number 0) (setq total (+ total number))
18428 (setq number (1= number)))
18429@group
18430@end group
18431* (let ((total 0)) (while (> number 0) (setq total ...)
18432 (setq number ...)) total)
18433* triangle-bugged(5)
18434 eval((triangle-bugged 5))
18435@group
18436@end group
18437 eval-last-sexp-1(nil)
18438 eval-last-sexp(nil)
18439 call-interactively(eval-last-sexp)
18440---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18441@end group
18442@end smallexample
18443
18444@need 1500
18445@noindent
18446Finally, after you type @kbd{d} two more times, Emacs will reach the
18447error, and the top two lines of the @file{*Backtrace*} buffer will look
18448like this:
18449
18450@smallexample
18451@group
18452---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18453Debugger entered--Lisp error: (void-function 1=)
18454* (1= number)
18455@dots{}
18456---------- Buffer: *Backtrace* ----------
18457@end group
18458@end smallexample
18459
18460By typing @kbd{d}, you were able to step through the function.
18461
18462You can quit a @file{*Backtrace*} buffer by typing @kbd{q} in it; this
18463quits the trace, but does not cancel @code{debug-on-entry}.
18464
18465@findex cancel-debug-on-entry
18466To cancel the effect of @code{debug-on-entry}, call
18467@code{cancel-debug-on-entry} and the name of the function, like this:
18468
18469@smallexample
18470M-x cancel-debug-on-entry RET triangle-bugged RET
18471@end smallexample
18472
18473@noindent
18474(If you are reading this in Info, cancel @code{debug-on-entry} now.)
18475
d6adf7e7 18476@node debug-on-quit
8cda6f8f
GM
18477@section @code{debug-on-quit} and @code{(debug)}
18478
18479In addition to setting @code{debug-on-error} or calling @code{debug-on-entry},
18480there are two other ways to start @code{debug}.
18481
18482@findex debug-on-quit
18483You can start @code{debug} whenever you type @kbd{C-g}
18484(@code{keyboard-quit}) by setting the variable @code{debug-on-quit} to
18485@code{t}. This is useful for debugging infinite loops.
18486
18487@need 1500
18488@cindex @code{(debug)} in code
18489Or, you can insert a line that says @code{(debug)} into your code
18490where you want the debugger to start, like this:
18491
18492@smallexample
18493@group
18494(defun triangle-bugged (number)
18495 "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive."
18496 (let ((total 0))
18497 (while (> number 0)
18498 (setq total (+ total number))
18499 (debug) ; @r{Start debugger.}
18500 (setq number (1= number))) ; @r{Error here.}
18501 total))
18502@end group
18503@end smallexample
18504
18505The @code{debug} function is described in detail in @ref{Debugger, ,
18506The Lisp Debugger, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
18507
d6adf7e7 18508@node edebug
8cda6f8f
GM
18509@section The @code{edebug} Source Level Debugger
18510@cindex Source level debugger
18511@findex edebug
18512
18513Edebug is a source level debugger. Edebug normally displays the
18514source of the code you are debugging, with an arrow at the left that
18515shows which line you are currently executing.
18516
18517You can walk through the execution of a function, line by line, or run
18518quickly until reaching a @dfn{breakpoint} where execution stops.
18519
18520Edebug is described in @ref{edebug, , Edebug, elisp, The GNU Emacs
18521Lisp Reference Manual}.
18522
18523@need 1250
18524Here is a bugged function definition for @code{triangle-recursively}.
18525@xref{Recursive triangle function, , Recursion in place of a counter},
18526for a review of it.
18527
18528@smallexample
18529@group
18530(defun triangle-recursively-bugged (number)
18531 "Return sum of numbers 1 through NUMBER inclusive.
18532Uses recursion."
18533 (if (= number 1)
18534 1
18535 (+ number
18536 (triangle-recursively-bugged
18537 (1= number))))) ; @r{Error here.}
18538@end group
18539@end smallexample
18540
18541@noindent
18542Normally, you would install this definition by positioning your cursor
18543after the function's closing parenthesis and typing @kbd{C-x C-e}
18544(@code{eval-last-sexp}) or else by positioning your cursor within the
18545definition and typing @kbd{C-M-x} (@code{eval-defun}). (By default,
18546the @code{eval-defun} command works only in Emacs Lisp mode or in Lisp
a1539cd7 18547Interaction mode.)
8cda6f8f
GM
18548
18549@need 1500
18550However, to prepare this function definition for Edebug, you must
18551first @dfn{instrument} the code using a different command. You can do
18552this by positioning your cursor within or just after the definition
18553and typing
18554
18555@smallexample
18556M-x edebug-defun RET
18557@end smallexample
18558
18559@noindent
18560This will cause Emacs to load Edebug automatically if it is not
18561already loaded, and properly instrument the function.
18562
18563After instrumenting the function, place your cursor after the
18564following expression and type @kbd{C-x C-e} (@code{eval-last-sexp}):
18565
18566@smallexample
18567(triangle-recursively-bugged 3)
18568@end smallexample
18569
18570@noindent
18571You will be jumped back to the source for
18572@code{triangle-recursively-bugged} and the cursor positioned at the
18573beginning of the @code{if} line of the function. Also, you will see
18574an arrowhead at the left hand side of that line. The arrowhead marks
18575the line where the function is executing. (In the following examples,
18576we show the arrowhead with @samp{=>}; in a windowing system, you may
18577see the arrowhead as a solid triangle in the window `fringe'.)
18578
18579@smallexample
18580=>@point{}(if (= number 1)
18581@end smallexample
18582
18583@noindent
18584@iftex
18585In the example, the location of point is displayed with a star,
18586@samp{@point{}} (in Info, it is displayed as @samp{-!-}).
18587@end iftex
18588@ifnottex
18589In the example, the location of point is displayed as @samp{@point{}}
18590(in a printed book, it is displayed with a five pointed star).
18591@end ifnottex
18592
18593If you now press @key{SPC}, point will move to the next expression to
18594be executed; the line will look like this:
18595
18596@smallexample
18597=>(if @point{}(= number 1)
18598@end smallexample
18599
18600@noindent
18601As you continue to press @key{SPC}, point will move from expression to
18602expression. At the same time, whenever an expression returns a value,
18603that value will be displayed in the echo area. For example, after you
18604move point past @code{number}, you will see the following:
18605
18606@smallexample
18607Result: 3 (#o3, #x3, ?\C-c)
18608@end smallexample
18609
18610@noindent
18611This means the value of @code{number} is 3, which is octal three,
18612hexadecimal three, and @sc{ascii} `control-c' (the third letter of the
18613alphabet, in case you need to know this information).
18614
18615You can continue moving through the code until you reach the line with
18616the error. Before evaluation, that line looks like this:
18617
18618@smallexample
18619=> @point{}(1= number))))) ; @r{Error here.}
18620@end smallexample
18621
18622@need 1250
18623@noindent
18624When you press @key{SPC} once again, you will produce an error message
18625that says:
18626
18627@smallexample
18628Symbol's function definition is void:@: 1=
18629@end smallexample
18630
18631@noindent
18632This is the bug.
18633
18634Press @kbd{q} to quit Edebug.
18635
18636To remove instrumentation from a function definition, simply
18637re-evaluate it with a command that does not instrument it.
18638For example, you could place your cursor after the definition's
18639closing parenthesis and type @kbd{C-x C-e}.
18640
18641Edebug does a great deal more than walk with you through a function.
18642You can set it so it races through on its own, stopping only at an
18643error or at specified stopping points; you can cause it to display the
18644changing values of various expressions; you can find out how many
18645times a function is called, and more.
18646
18647Edebug is described in @ref{edebug, , Edebug, elisp, The GNU Emacs
18648Lisp Reference Manual}.
18649
18650@need 1500
d6adf7e7 18651@node Debugging Exercises
8cda6f8f
GM
18652@section Debugging Exercises
18653
18654@itemize @bullet
18655@item
ea4f7750 18656Install the @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} function and then cause it to
8cda6f8f
GM
18657enter the built-in debugger when you call it. Run the command on a
18658region containing two words. You will need to press @kbd{d} a
18659remarkable number of times. On your system, is a `hook' called after
18660the command finishes? (For information on hooks, see @ref{Command
18661Overview, , Command Loop Overview, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference
18662Manual}.)
18663
18664@item
ea4f7750 18665Copy @code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} into the @file{*scratch*} buffer,
8cda6f8f
GM
18666instrument the function for Edebug, and walk through its execution.
18667The function does not need to have a bug, although you can introduce
18668one if you wish. If the function lacks a bug, the walk-through
18669completes without problems.
18670
18671@item
18672While running Edebug, type @kbd{?} to see a list of all the Edebug commands.
1df7defd 18673(The @code{global-edebug-prefix} is usually @kbd{C-x X}, i.e.,
8cda6f8f
GM
18674@kbd{@key{CTRL}-x} followed by an upper case @kbd{X}; use this prefix
18675for commands made outside of the Edebug debugging buffer.)
18676
18677@item
18678In the Edebug debugging buffer, use the @kbd{p}
18679(@code{edebug-bounce-point}) command to see where in the region the
ea4f7750 18680@code{@value{COUNT-WORDS}} is working.
8cda6f8f
GM
18681
18682@item
18683Move point to some spot further down the function and then type the
18684@kbd{h} (@code{edebug-goto-here}) command to jump to that location.
18685
18686@item
18687Use the @kbd{t} (@code{edebug-trace-mode}) command to cause Edebug to
18688walk through the function on its own; use an upper case @kbd{T} for
18689@code{edebug-Trace-fast-mode}.
18690
18691@item
18692Set a breakpoint, then run Edebug in Trace mode until it reaches the
18693stopping point.
18694@end itemize
18695
d6adf7e7 18696@node Conclusion
8cda6f8f
GM
18697@chapter Conclusion
18698
18699We have now reached the end of this Introduction. You have now
18700learned enough about programming in Emacs Lisp to set values, to write
18701simple @file{.emacs} files for yourself and your friends, and write
18702simple customizations and extensions to Emacs.
18703
18704This is a place to stop. Or, if you wish, you can now go onward, and
18705teach yourself.
18706
18707You have learned some of the basic nuts and bolts of programming. But
18708only some. There are a great many more brackets and hinges that are
18709easy to use that we have not touched.
18710
18711A path you can follow right now lies among the sources to GNU Emacs
18712and in
18713@ifnotinfo
18714@cite{The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
18715@end ifnotinfo
18716@ifinfo
18717@ref{Top, , The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual, elisp, The GNU
18718Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
18719@end ifinfo
18720
18721The Emacs Lisp sources are an adventure. When you read the sources and
18722come across a function or expression that is unfamiliar, you need to
18723figure out or find out what it does.
18724
18725Go to the Reference Manual. It is a thorough, complete, and fairly
18726easy-to-read description of Emacs Lisp. It is written not only for
18727experts, but for people who know what you know. (The @cite{Reference
18728Manual} comes with the standard GNU Emacs distribution. Like this
18729introduction, it comes as a Texinfo source file, so you can read it
18730on-line and as a typeset, printed book.)
18731
18732Go to the other on-line help that is part of GNU Emacs: the on-line
88c26f5c 18733documentation for all functions and variables, and @code{find-tag},
8cda6f8f
GM
18734the program that takes you to sources.
18735
18736Here is an example of how I explore the sources. Because of its name,
18737@file{simple.el} is the file I looked at first, a long time ago. As
18738it happens some of the functions in @file{simple.el} are complicated,
18739or at least look complicated at first sight. The @code{open-line}
18740function, for example, looks complicated.
18741
18742You may want to walk through this function slowly, as we did with the
18743@code{forward-sentence} function. (@xref{forward-sentence, The
18744@code{forward-sentence} function}.) Or you may want to skip that
18745function and look at another, such as @code{split-line}. You don't
18746need to read all the functions. According to
18747@code{count-words-in-defun}, the @code{split-line} function contains
18748102 words and symbols.
18749
18750Even though it is short, @code{split-line} contains expressions
18751we have not studied: @code{skip-chars-forward}, @code{indent-to},
18752@code{current-column} and @code{insert-and-inherit}.
18753
18754Consider the @code{skip-chars-forward} function. (It is part of the
18755function definition for @code{back-to-indentation}, which is shown in
18756@ref{Review, , Review}.)
18757
18758In GNU Emacs, you can find out more about @code{skip-chars-forward} by
18759typing @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}) and the name of the
18760function. This gives you the function documentation.
18761
18762You may be able to guess what is done by a well named function such as
18763@code{indent-to}; or you can look it up, too. Incidentally, the
18764@code{describe-function} function itself is in @file{help.el}; it is
18765one of those long, but decipherable functions. You can look up
18766@code{describe-function} using the @kbd{C-h f} command!
18767
18768In this instance, since the code is Lisp, the @file{*Help*} buffer
18769contains the name of the library containing the function's source.
18770You can put point over the name of the library and press the RET key,
18771which in this situation is bound to @code{help-follow}, and be taken
18772directly to the source, in the same way as @kbd{M-.}
18773(@code{find-tag}).
18774
18775The definition for @code{describe-function} illustrates how to
18776customize the @code{interactive} expression without using the standard
18777character codes; and it shows how to create a temporary buffer.
18778
18779(The @code{indent-to} function is written in C rather than Emacs Lisp;
18780it is a `built-in' function. @code{help-follow} takes you to its
18781source as does @code{find-tag}, when properly set up.)
18782
18783You can look at a function's source using @code{find-tag}, which is
18784bound to @kbd{M-.} Finally, you can find out what the Reference
18785Manual has to say by visiting the manual in Info, and typing @kbd{i}
18786(@code{Info-index}) and the name of the function, or by looking up the
18787function in the index to a printed copy of the manual.
18788
18789Similarly, you can find out what is meant by
18790@code{insert-and-inherit}.
18791
18792Other interesting source files include @file{paragraphs.el},
18793@file{loaddefs.el}, and @file{loadup.el}. The @file{paragraphs.el}
18794file includes short, easily understood functions as well as longer
18795ones. The @file{loaddefs.el} file contains the many standard
18796autoloads and many keymaps. I have never looked at it all; only at
18797parts. @file{loadup.el} is the file that loads the standard parts of
18798Emacs; it tells you a great deal about how Emacs is built.
18799(@xref{Building Emacs, , Building Emacs, elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp
18800Reference Manual}, for more about building.)
18801
18802As I said, you have learned some nuts and bolts; however, and very
18803importantly, we have hardly touched major aspects of programming; I
18804have said nothing about how to sort information, except to use the
18805predefined @code{sort} function; I have said nothing about how to store
18806information, except to use variables and lists; I have said nothing
18807about how to write programs that write programs. These are topics for
18808another, and different kind of book, a different kind of learning.
18809
18810What you have done is learn enough for much practical work with GNU
18811Emacs. What you have done is get started. This is the end of a
18812beginning.
18813
18814@c ================ Appendix ================
18815
d6adf7e7 18816@node the-the
8cda6f8f
GM
18817@appendix The @code{the-the} Function
18818@findex the-the
18819@cindex Duplicated words function
18820@cindex Words, duplicated
18821
18822Sometimes when you you write text, you duplicate words---as with ``you
18823you'' near the beginning of this sentence. I find that most
18824frequently, I duplicate ``the''; hence, I call the function for
18825detecting duplicated words, @code{the-the}.
18826
18827@need 1250
18828As a first step, you could use the following regular expression to
18829search for duplicates:
18830
18831@smallexample
18832\\(\\w+[ \t\n]+\\)\\1
18833@end smallexample
18834
18835@noindent
18836This regexp matches one or more word-constituent characters followed
18837by one or more spaces, tabs, or newlines. However, it does not detect
18838duplicated words on different lines, since the ending of the first
18839word, the end of the line, is different from the ending of the second
18840word, a space. (For more information about regular expressions, see
18841@ref{Regexp Search, , Regular Expression Searches}, as well as
18842@ref{Regexps, , Syntax of Regular Expressions, emacs, The GNU Emacs
18843Manual}, and @ref{Regular Expressions, , Regular Expressions, elisp,
18844The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.)
18845
18846You might try searching just for duplicated word-constituent
18847characters but that does not work since the pattern detects doubles
18848such as the two occurrences of `th' in `with the'.
18849
18850Another possible regexp searches for word-constituent characters
18851followed by non-word-constituent characters, reduplicated. Here,
18852@w{@samp{\\w+}} matches one or more word-constituent characters and
18853@w{@samp{\\W*}} matches zero or more non-word-constituent characters.
18854
18855@smallexample
18856\\(\\(\\w+\\)\\W*\\)\\1
18857@end smallexample
18858
18859@noindent
18860Again, not useful.
18861
18862Here is the pattern that I use. It is not perfect, but good enough.
18863@w{@samp{\\b}} matches the empty string, provided it is at the beginning
18864or end of a word; @w{@samp{[^@@ \n\t]+}} matches one or more occurrences of
18865any characters that are @emph{not} an @@-sign, space, newline, or tab.
18866
18867@smallexample
18868\\b\\([^@@ \n\t]+\\)[ \n\t]+\\1\\b
18869@end smallexample
18870
18871One can write more complicated expressions, but I found that this
18872expression is good enough, so I use it.
18873
18874Here is the @code{the-the} function, as I include it in my
18875@file{.emacs} file, along with a handy global key binding:
18876
18877@smallexample
18878@group
18879(defun the-the ()
18880 "Search forward for for a duplicated word."
18881 (interactive)
18882 (message "Searching for for duplicated words ...")
18883 (push-mark)
18884@end group
18885@group
18886 ;; This regexp is not perfect
18887 ;; but is fairly good over all:
18888 (if (re-search-forward
18889 "\\b\\([^@@ \n\t]+\\)[ \n\t]+\\1\\b" nil 'move)
18890 (message "Found duplicated word.")
18891 (message "End of buffer")))
18892@end group
18893
18894@group
18895;; Bind `the-the' to C-c \
18896(global-set-key "\C-c\\" 'the-the)
18897@end group
18898@end smallexample
18899
18900@sp 1
18901Here is test text:
18902
18903@smallexample
18904@group
18905one two two three four five
18906five six seven
18907@end group
18908@end smallexample
18909
18910You can substitute the other regular expressions shown above in the
18911function definition and try each of them on this list.
18912
d6adf7e7 18913@node Kill Ring
8cda6f8f
GM
18914@appendix Handling the Kill Ring
18915@cindex Kill ring handling
18916@cindex Handling the kill ring
18917@cindex Ring, making a list like a
18918
18919The kill ring is a list that is transformed into a ring by the
18920workings of the @code{current-kill} function. The @code{yank} and
18921@code{yank-pop} commands use the @code{current-kill} function.
18922
18923This appendix describes the @code{current-kill} function as well as
18924both the @code{yank} and the @code{yank-pop} commands, but first,
18925consider the workings of the kill ring.
18926
18927@menu
18928* What the Kill Ring Does::
18929* current-kill::
18930* yank:: Paste a copy of a clipped element.
18931* yank-pop:: Insert element pointed to.
18932* ring file::
18933@end menu
18934
8cda6f8f 18935@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 18936@node What the Kill Ring Does
8cda6f8f
GM
18937@unnumberedsec What the Kill Ring Does
18938@end ifnottex
18939
18940@need 1250
18941The kill ring has a default maximum length of sixty items; this number
18942is too large for an explanation. Instead, set it to four. Please
18943evaluate the following:
18944
18945@smallexample
18946@group
18947(setq old-kill-ring-max kill-ring-max)
18948(setq kill-ring-max 4)
18949@end group
18950@end smallexample
18951
18952@noindent
18953Then, please copy each line of the following indented example into the
18954kill ring. You may kill each line with @kbd{C-k} or mark it and copy
18955it with @kbd{M-w}.
18956
18957@noindent
18958(In a read-only buffer, such as the @file{*info*} buffer, the kill
18959command, @kbd{C-k} (@code{kill-line}), will not remove the text,
18960merely copy it to the kill ring. However, your machine may beep at
18961you. Alternatively, for silence, you may copy the region of each line
18962with the @kbd{M-w} (@code{kill-ring-save}) command. You must mark
18963each line for this command to succeed, but it does not matter at which
18964end you put point or mark.)
18965
18966@need 1250
18967@noindent
18968Please invoke the calls in order, so that five elements attempt to
18969fill the kill ring:
18970
18971@smallexample
18972@group
18973first some text
18974second piece of text
18975third line
18976fourth line of text
18977fifth bit of text
18978@end group
18979@end smallexample
18980
18981@need 1250
18982@noindent
18983Then find the value of @code{kill-ring} by evaluating
18984
18985@smallexample
18986kill-ring
18987@end smallexample
18988
18989@need 800
18990@noindent
18991It is:
18992
18993@smallexample
18994@group
18995("fifth bit of text" "fourth line of text"
18996"third line" "second piece of text")
18997@end group
18998@end smallexample
18999
19000@noindent
19001The first element, @samp{first some text}, was dropped.
19002
19003@need 1250
19004To return to the old value for the length of the kill ring, evaluate:
19005
19006@smallexample
19007(setq kill-ring-max old-kill-ring-max)
19008@end smallexample
19009
d6adf7e7 19010@node current-kill
8cda6f8f
GM
19011@appendixsec The @code{current-kill} Function
19012@findex current-kill
19013
19014The @code{current-kill} function changes the element in the kill ring
19015to which @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} points. (Also, the
19016@code{kill-new} function sets @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} to point
867d4bb3 19017to the latest element of the kill ring. The @code{kill-new}
8cda6f8f
GM
19018function is used directly or indirectly by @code{kill-append},
19019@code{copy-region-as-kill}, @code{kill-ring-save}, @code{kill-line},
19020and @code{kill-region}.)
19021
19022@menu
19023* Code for current-kill::
19024* Understanding current-kill::
19025@end menu
19026
8cda6f8f 19027@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19028@node Code for current-kill
8cda6f8f
GM
19029@unnumberedsubsec The code for @code{current-kill}
19030@end ifnottex
19031
19032
19033@need 1500
19034The @code{current-kill} function is used by @code{yank} and by
19035@code{yank-pop}. Here is the code for @code{current-kill}:
19036
19037@smallexample
19038@group
19039(defun current-kill (n &optional do-not-move)
19040 "Rotate the yanking point by N places, and then return that kill.
19041If N is zero, `interprogram-paste-function' is set, and calling it
19042returns a string, then that string is added to the front of the
19043kill ring and returned as the latest kill.
19044@end group
19045@group
19046If optional arg DO-NOT-MOVE is non-nil, then don't actually move the
19047yanking point; just return the Nth kill forward."
19048 (let ((interprogram-paste (and (= n 0)
19049 interprogram-paste-function
19050 (funcall interprogram-paste-function))))
19051@end group
19052@group
19053 (if interprogram-paste
19054 (progn
19055 ;; Disable the interprogram cut function when we add the new
19056 ;; text to the kill ring, so Emacs doesn't try to own the
19057 ;; selection, with identical text.
19058 (let ((interprogram-cut-function nil))
19059 (kill-new interprogram-paste))
19060 interprogram-paste)
19061@end group
19062@group
19063 (or kill-ring (error "Kill ring is empty"))
19064 (let ((ARGth-kill-element
19065 (nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
19066 (length kill-ring))
19067 kill-ring)))
19068 (or do-not-move
19069 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element))
19070 (car ARGth-kill-element)))))
19071@end group
19072@end smallexample
19073
19074Remember also that the @code{kill-new} function sets
867d4bb3 19075@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} to the latest element of the kill
8cda6f8f
GM
19076ring, which means that all the functions that call it set the value
19077indirectly: @code{kill-append}, @code{copy-region-as-kill},
19078@code{kill-ring-save}, @code{kill-line}, and @code{kill-region}.
19079
19080@need 1500
19081Here is the line in @code{kill-new}, which is explained in
19082@ref{kill-new function, , The @code{kill-new} function}.
19083
19084@smallexample
19085(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer kill-ring)
19086@end smallexample
19087
8cda6f8f 19088@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19089@node Understanding current-kill
8cda6f8f
GM
19090@unnumberedsubsec @code{current-kill} in Outline
19091@end ifnottex
19092
19093The @code{current-kill} function looks complex, but as usual, it can
19094be understood by taking it apart piece by piece. First look at it in
19095skeletal form:
19096
19097@smallexample
19098@group
19099(defun current-kill (n &optional do-not-move)
19100 "Rotate the yanking point by N places, and then return that kill."
19101 (let @var{varlist}
19102 @var{body}@dots{})
19103@end group
19104@end smallexample
19105
19106This function takes two arguments, one of which is optional. It has a
19107documentation string. It is @emph{not} interactive.
19108
19109@menu
19110* Body of current-kill::
19111* Digression concerning error:: How to mislead humans, but not computers.
19112* Determining the Element::
19113@end menu
19114
8cda6f8f 19115@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19116@node Body of current-kill
8cda6f8f
GM
19117@unnumberedsubsubsec The Body of @code{current-kill}
19118@end ifnottex
19119
19120The body of the function definition is a @code{let} expression, which
19121itself has a body as well as a @var{varlist}.
19122
19123The @code{let} expression declares a variable that will be only usable
19124within the bounds of this function. This variable is called
19125@code{interprogram-paste} and is for copying to another program. It
19126is not for copying within this instance of GNU Emacs. Most window
19127systems provide a facility for interprogram pasting. Sadly, that
19128facility usually provides only for the last element. Most windowing
19129systems have not adopted a ring of many possibilities, even though
19130Emacs has provided it for decades.
19131
19132The @code{if} expression has two parts, one if there exists
19133@code{interprogram-paste} and one if not.
19134
19135@need 2000
19136Let us consider the `if not' or else-part of the @code{current-kill}
867d4bb3 19137function. (The then-part uses the @code{kill-new} function, which
8cda6f8f
GM
19138we have already described. @xref{kill-new function, , The
19139@code{kill-new} function}.)
19140
19141@smallexample
19142@group
19143(or kill-ring (error "Kill ring is empty"))
19144(let ((ARGth-kill-element
19145 (nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
19146 (length kill-ring))
19147 kill-ring)))
19148 (or do-not-move
19149 (setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element))
19150 (car ARGth-kill-element))
19151@end group
19152@end smallexample
19153
19154@noindent
19155The code first checks whether the kill ring has content; otherwise it
19156signals an error.
19157
19158@need 1000
19159Note that the @code{or} expression is very similar to testing length
19160with an @code{if}:
19161
19162@findex zerop
19163@findex error
19164@smallexample
19165@group
19166(if (zerop (length kill-ring)) ; @r{if-part}
19167 (error "Kill ring is empty")) ; @r{then-part}
19168 ;; No else-part
19169@end group
19170@end smallexample
19171
19172@noindent
19173If there is not anything in the kill ring, its length must be zero and
19174an error message sent to the user: @samp{Kill ring is empty}. The
19175@code{current-kill} function uses an @code{or} expression which is
19176simpler. But an @code{if} expression reminds us what goes on.
19177
19178This @code{if} expression uses the function @code{zerop} which returns
19179true if the value it is testing is zero. When @code{zerop} tests
19180true, the then-part of the @code{if} is evaluated. The then-part is a
19181list starting with the function @code{error}, which is a function that
19182is similar to the @code{message} function
19183(@pxref{message, , The @code{message} Function}) in that
19184it prints a one-line message in the echo area. However, in addition
19185to printing a message, @code{error} also stops evaluation of the
19186function within which it is embedded. This means that the rest of the
19187function will not be evaluated if the length of the kill ring is zero.
19188
19189Then the @code{current-kill} function selects the element to return.
19190The selection depends on the number of places that @code{current-kill}
19191rotates and on where @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} points.
19192
19193Next, either the optional @code{do-not-move} argument is true or the
19194current value of @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} is set to point to the
19195list. Finally, another expression returns the first element of the
19196list even if the @code{do-not-move} argument is true.
19197
8cda6f8f 19198@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19199@node Digression concerning error
8cda6f8f
GM
19200@unnumberedsubsubsec Digression about the word `error'
19201@end ifnottex
19202
19203In my opinion, it is slightly misleading, at least to humans, to use
19204the term `error' as the name of the @code{error} function. A better
19205term would be `cancel'. Strictly speaking, of course, you cannot
19206point to, much less rotate a pointer to a list that has no length, so
19207from the point of view of the computer, the word `error' is correct.
19208But a human expects to attempt this sort of thing, if only to find out
19209whether the kill ring is full or empty. This is an act of
19210exploration.
19211
19212From the human point of view, the act of exploration and discovery is
09e80d9f 19213not necessarily an error, and therefore should not be labeled as one,
8cda6f8f
GM
19214even in the bowels of a computer. As it is, the code in Emacs implies
19215that a human who is acting virtuously, by exploring his or her
19216environment, is making an error. This is bad. Even though the computer
19217takes the same steps as it does when there is an `error', a term such as
19218`cancel' would have a clearer connotation.
19219
8cda6f8f 19220@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19221@node Determining the Element
8cda6f8f
GM
19222@unnumberedsubsubsec Determining the Element
19223@end ifnottex
19224
19225Among other actions, the else-part of the @code{if} expression sets
19226the value of @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} to
19227@code{ARGth-kill-element} when the kill ring has something in it and
19228the value of @code{do-not-move} is @code{nil}.
19229
19230@need 800
19231The code looks like this:
19232
19233@smallexample
19234@group
19235(nthcdr (mod (- n (length kill-ring-yank-pointer))
19236 (length kill-ring))
19237 kill-ring)))
19238@end group
19239@end smallexample
19240
19241This needs some examination. Unless it is not supposed to move the
19242pointer, the @code{current-kill} function changes where
19243@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} points.
19244That is what the
19245@w{@code{(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer ARGth-kill-element))}}
19246expression does. Also, clearly, @code{ARGth-kill-element} is being
19247set to be equal to some @sc{cdr} of the kill ring, using the
19248@code{nthcdr} function that is described in an earlier section.
19249(@xref{copy-region-as-kill}.) How does it do this?
19250
19251As we have seen before (@pxref{nthcdr}), the @code{nthcdr} function
19252works by repeatedly taking the @sc{cdr} of a list---it takes the
19253@sc{cdr} of the @sc{cdr} of the @sc{cdr} @dots{}
19254
19255@need 800
19256The two following expressions produce the same result:
19257
19258@smallexample
19259@group
19260(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer (cdr kill-ring))
19261
19262(setq kill-ring-yank-pointer (nthcdr 1 kill-ring))
19263@end group
19264@end smallexample
19265
19266However, the @code{nthcdr} expression is more complicated. It uses
19267the @code{mod} function to determine which @sc{cdr} to select.
19268
19269(You will remember to look at inner functions first; indeed, we will
19270have to go inside the @code{mod}.)
19271
19272The @code{mod} function returns the value of its first argument modulo
19273the second; that is to say, it returns the remainder after dividing
19274the first argument by the second. The value returned has the same
19275sign as the second argument.
19276
19277@need 800
19278Thus,
19279
19280@smallexample
19281@group
19282(mod 12 4)
19283 @result{} 0 ;; @r{because there is no remainder}
19284(mod 13 4)
19285 @result{} 1
19286@end group
19287@end smallexample
19288
19289@need 1250
19290In this case, the first argument is often smaller than the second.
19291That is fine.
19292
19293@smallexample
19294@group
19295(mod 0 4)
19296 @result{} 0
19297(mod 1 4)
19298 @result{} 1
19299@end group
19300@end smallexample
19301
19302We can guess what the @code{-} function does. It is like @code{+} but
19303subtracts instead of adds; the @code{-} function subtracts its second
19304argument from its first. Also, we already know what the @code{length}
19305function does (@pxref{length}). It returns the length of a list.
19306
19307And @code{n} is the name of the required argument to the
19308@code{current-kill} function.
19309
19310@need 1250
19311So when the first argument to @code{nthcdr} is zero, the @code{nthcdr}
19312expression returns the whole list, as you can see by evaluating the
19313following:
19314
19315@smallexample
19316@group
19317;; kill-ring-yank-pointer @r{and} kill-ring @r{have a length of four}
19318;; @r{and} (mod (- 0 4) 4) @result{} 0
19319(nthcdr (mod (- 0 4) 4)
19320 '("fourth line of text"
19321 "third line"
19322 "second piece of text"
19323 "first some text"))
19324@end group
19325@end smallexample
19326
19327@need 1250
19328When the first argument to the @code{current-kill} function is one,
19329the @code{nthcdr} expression returns the list without its first
19330element.
19331
19332@smallexample
19333@group
19334(nthcdr (mod (- 1 4) 4)
19335 '("fourth line of text"
19336 "third line"
19337 "second piece of text"
19338 "first some text"))
19339@end group
19340@end smallexample
19341
19342@cindex @samp{global variable} defined
19343@cindex @samp{variable, global}, defined
19344Incidentally, both @code{kill-ring} and @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer}
19345are @dfn{global variables}. That means that any expression in Emacs
19346Lisp can access them. They are not like the local variables set by
19347@code{let} or like the symbols in an argument list.
19348Local variables can only be accessed
19349within the @code{let} that defines them or the function that specifies
19350them in an argument list (and within expressions called by them).
19351
19352@ignore
19353@c texi2dvi fails when the name of the section is within ifnottex ...
19354(@xref{Prevent confusion, , @code{let} Prevents Confusion}, and
edbf4569 19355@ref{defun, , The @code{defun} Macro}.)
8cda6f8f
GM
19356@end ignore
19357
d6adf7e7 19358@node yank
8cda6f8f
GM
19359@appendixsec @code{yank}
19360@findex yank
19361
19362After learning about @code{current-kill}, the code for the
19363@code{yank} function is almost easy.
19364
19365The @code{yank} function does not use the
19366@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable directly. It calls
19367@code{insert-for-yank} which calls @code{current-kill} which sets the
19368@code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} variable.
19369
19370@need 1250
19371The code looks like this:
19372
19373@c in GNU Emacs 22
19374@smallexample
19375@group
19376(defun yank (&optional arg)
19377 "Reinsert (\"paste\") the last stretch of killed text.
19378More precisely, reinsert the stretch of killed text most recently
19379killed OR yanked. Put point at end, and set mark at beginning.
19380With just \\[universal-argument] as argument, same but put point at
19381beginning (and mark at end). With argument N, reinsert the Nth most
19382recently killed stretch of killed text.
19383
19384When this command inserts killed text into the buffer, it honors
19385`yank-excluded-properties' and `yank-handler' as described in the
19386doc string for `insert-for-yank-1', which see.
19387
19388See also the command \\[yank-pop]."
19389@end group
19390@group
19391 (interactive "*P")
19392 (setq yank-window-start (window-start))
19393 ;; If we don't get all the way thru, make last-command indicate that
19394 ;; for the following command.
19395 (setq this-command t)
19396 (push-mark (point))
19397@end group
19398@group
19399 (insert-for-yank (current-kill (cond
19400 ((listp arg) 0)
19401 ((eq arg '-) -2)
19402 (t (1- arg)))))
19403 (if (consp arg)
19404 ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark,
19405 ;; but doesn't activate the mark.
19406 ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
19407 ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
19408 (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
19409 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer)))))
19410@end group
19411@group
19412 ;; If we do get all the way thru, make this-command indicate that.
19413 (if (eq this-command t)
19414 (setq this-command 'yank))
19415 nil)
19416@end group
19417@end smallexample
19418
19419The key expression is @code{insert-for-yank}, which inserts the string
19420returned by @code{current-kill}, but removes some text properties from
19421it.
19422
19423However, before getting to that expression, the function sets the value
19424of @code{yank-window-start} to the position returned by the
19425@code{(window-start)} expression, the position at which the display
19426currently starts. The @code{yank} function also sets
19427@code{this-command} and pushes the mark.
19428
19429After it yanks the appropriate element, if the optional argument is a
19430@sc{cons} rather than a number or nothing, it puts point at beginning
19431of the yanked text and mark at its end.
19432
19433(The @code{prog1} function is like @code{progn} but returns the value
19434of its first argument rather than the value of its last argument. Its
19435first argument is forced to return the buffer's mark as an integer.
19436You can see the documentation for these functions by placing point
19437over them in this buffer and then typing @kbd{C-h f}
19438(@code{describe-function}) followed by a @kbd{RET}; the default is the
19439function.)
19440
19441The last part of the function tells what to do when it succeeds.
19442
d6adf7e7 19443@node yank-pop
8cda6f8f
GM
19444@appendixsec @code{yank-pop}
19445@findex yank-pop
19446
19447After understanding @code{yank} and @code{current-kill}, you know how
19448to approach the @code{yank-pop} function. Leaving out the
19449documentation to save space, it looks like this:
19450
19451@c GNU Emacs 22
19452@smallexample
19453@group
19454(defun yank-pop (&optional arg)
19455 "@dots{}"
19456 (interactive "*p")
19457 (if (not (eq last-command 'yank))
19458 (error "Previous command was not a yank"))
19459@end group
19460@group
19461 (setq this-command 'yank)
19462 (unless arg (setq arg 1))
19463 (let ((inhibit-read-only t)
19464 (before (< (point) (mark t))))
19465@end group
19466@group
19467 (if before
19468 (funcall (or yank-undo-function 'delete-region) (point) (mark t))
19469 (funcall (or yank-undo-function 'delete-region) (mark t) (point)))
19470 (setq yank-undo-function nil)
19471@end group
19472@group
19473 (set-marker (mark-marker) (point) (current-buffer))
19474 (insert-for-yank (current-kill arg))
19475 ;; Set the window start back where it was in the yank command,
19476 ;; if possible.
19477 (set-window-start (selected-window) yank-window-start t)
19478@end group
19479@group
19480 (if before
19481 ;; This is like exchange-point-and-mark,
19482 ;; but doesn't activate the mark.
19483 ;; It is cleaner to avoid activation, even though the command
19484 ;; loop would deactivate the mark because we inserted text.
19485 (goto-char (prog1 (mark t)
19486 (set-marker (mark-marker)
19487 (point)
19488 (current-buffer))))))
19489 nil)
19490@end group
19491@end smallexample
19492
19493The function is interactive with a small @samp{p} so the prefix
19494argument is processed and passed to the function. The command can
19495only be used after a previous yank; otherwise an error message is
19496sent. This check uses the variable @code{last-command} which is set
19497by @code{yank} and is discussed elsewhere.
19498(@xref{copy-region-as-kill}.)
19499
19500The @code{let} clause sets the variable @code{before} to true or false
19501depending whether point is before or after mark and then the region
19502between point and mark is deleted. This is the region that was just
19503inserted by the previous yank and it is this text that will be
19504replaced.
19505
19506@code{funcall} calls its first argument as a function, passing
19507remaining arguments to it. The first argument is whatever the
19508@code{or} expression returns. The two remaining arguments are the
19509positions of point and mark set by the preceding @code{yank} command.
19510
19511There is more, but that is the hardest part.
19512
d6adf7e7 19513@node ring file
8cda6f8f
GM
19514@appendixsec The @file{ring.el} File
19515@cindex @file{ring.el} file
19516
19517Interestingly, GNU Emacs posses a file called @file{ring.el} that
19518provides many of the features we just discussed. But functions such
19519as @code{kill-ring-yank-pointer} do not use this library, possibly
19520because they were written earlier.
19521
d6adf7e7 19522@node Full Graph
09e80d9f 19523@appendix A Graph with Labeled Axes
8cda6f8f
GM
19524
19525Printed axes help you understand a graph. They convey scale. In an
19526earlier chapter (@pxref{Readying a Graph, , Readying a Graph}), we
19527wrote the code to print the body of a graph. Here we write the code
09e80d9f 19528for printing and labeling vertical and horizontal axes, along with the
8cda6f8f
GM
19529body itself.
19530
19531@menu
09e80d9f 19532* Labeled Example::
8cda6f8f
GM
19533* print-graph Varlist:: @code{let} expression in @code{print-graph}.
19534* print-Y-axis:: Print a label for the vertical axis.
19535* print-X-axis:: Print a horizontal label.
19536* Print Whole Graph:: The function to print a complete graph.
19537@end menu
19538
8cda6f8f 19539@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19540@node Labeled Example
09e80d9f 19541@unnumberedsec Labeled Example Graph
8cda6f8f
GM
19542@end ifnottex
19543
19544Since insertions fill a buffer to the right and below point, the new
19545graph printing function should first print the Y or vertical axis,
19546then the body of the graph, and finally the X or horizontal axis.
19547This sequence lays out for us the contents of the function:
19548
19549@enumerate
19550@item
19551Set up code.
19552
19553@item
19554Print Y axis.
19555
19556@item
19557Print body of graph.
19558
19559@item
19560Print X axis.
19561@end enumerate
19562
19563@need 800
19564Here is an example of how a finished graph should look:
19565
19566@smallexample
19567@group
19568 10 -
19569 *
19570 * *
19571 * **
19572 * ***
19573 5 - * *******
19574 * *** *******
19575 *************
19576 ***************
19577 1 - ****************
19578 | | | |
19579 1 5 10 15
19580@end group
19581@end smallexample
19582
19583@noindent
09e80d9f 19584In this graph, both the vertical and the horizontal axes are labeled
8cda6f8f 19585with numbers. However, in some graphs, the horizontal axis is time
09e80d9f 19586and would be better labeled with months, like this:
8cda6f8f
GM
19587
19588@smallexample
19589@group
19590 5 - *
19591 * ** *
19592 *******
19593 ********** **
19594 1 - **************
19595 | ^ |
19596 Jan June Jan
19597@end group
19598@end smallexample
19599
19600Indeed, with a little thought, we can easily come up with a variety of
09e80d9f 19601vertical and horizontal labeling schemes. Our task could become
8cda6f8f 19602complicated. But complications breed confusion. Rather than permit
09e80d9f 19603this, it is better choose a simple labeling scheme for our first
8cda6f8f
GM
19604effort, and to modify or replace it later.
19605
19606@need 1200
19607These considerations suggest the following outline for the
19608@code{print-graph} function:
19609
19610@smallexample
19611@group
19612(defun print-graph (numbers-list)
19613 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
19614 (let ((height @dots{}
19615 @dots{}))
19616@end group
19617@group
19618 (print-Y-axis height @dots{} )
19619 (graph-body-print numbers-list)
19620 (print-X-axis @dots{} )))
19621@end group
19622@end smallexample
19623
19624We can work on each part of the @code{print-graph} function definition
19625in turn.
19626
d6adf7e7 19627@node print-graph Varlist
8cda6f8f
GM
19628@appendixsec The @code{print-graph} Varlist
19629@cindex @code{print-graph} varlist
19630
19631In writing the @code{print-graph} function, the first task is to write
19632the varlist in the @code{let} expression. (We will leave aside for the
19633moment any thoughts about making the function interactive or about the
19634contents of its documentation string.)
19635
19636The varlist should set several values. Clearly, the top of the label
19637for the vertical axis must be at least the height of the graph, which
19638means that we must obtain this information here. Note that the
19639@code{print-graph-body} function also requires this information. There
19640is no reason to calculate the height of the graph in two different
19641places, so we should change @code{print-graph-body} from the way we
19642defined it earlier to take advantage of the calculation.
19643
19644Similarly, both the function for printing the X axis labels and the
19645@code{print-graph-body} function need to learn the value of the width of
19646each symbol. We can perform the calculation here and change the
19647definition for @code{print-graph-body} from the way we defined it in the
19648previous chapter.
19649
19650The length of the label for the horizontal axis must be at least as long
19651as the graph. However, this information is used only in the function
19652that prints the horizontal axis, so it does not need to be calculated here.
19653
19654These thoughts lead us directly to the following form for the varlist
19655in the @code{let} for @code{print-graph}:
19656
19657@smallexample
19658@group
19659(let ((height (apply 'max numbers-list)) ; @r{First version.}
19660 (symbol-width (length graph-blank)))
19661@end group
19662@end smallexample
19663
19664@noindent
19665As we shall see, this expression is not quite right.
19666
19667@need 2000
d6adf7e7 19668@node print-Y-axis
8cda6f8f
GM
19669@appendixsec The @code{print-Y-axis} Function
19670@cindex Axis, print vertical
19671@cindex Y axis printing
19672@cindex Vertical axis printing
19673@cindex Print vertical axis
19674
19675The job of the @code{print-Y-axis} function is to print a label for
19676the vertical axis that looks like this:
19677
19678@smallexample
19679@group
19680 10 -
19681
19682
19683
19684
19685 5 -
19686
19687
19688
19689 1 -
19690@end group
19691@end smallexample
19692
19693@noindent
19694The function should be passed the height of the graph, and then should
19695construct and insert the appropriate numbers and marks.
19696
19697@menu
19698* print-Y-axis in Detail::
19699* Height of label:: What height for the Y axis?
19700* Compute a Remainder:: How to compute the remainder of a division.
19701* Y Axis Element:: Construct a line for the Y axis.
19702* Y-axis-column:: Generate a list of Y axis labels.
19703* print-Y-axis Penultimate:: A not quite final version.
19704@end menu
19705
8cda6f8f 19706@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19707@node print-Y-axis in Detail
8cda6f8f
GM
19708@unnumberedsubsec The @code{print-Y-axis} Function in Detail
19709@end ifnottex
19710
19711It is easy enough to see in the figure what the Y axis label should
19712look like; but to say in words, and then to write a function
19713definition to do the job is another matter. It is not quite true to
19714say that we want a number and a tic every five lines: there are only
19715three lines between the @samp{1} and the @samp{5} (lines 2, 3, and 4),
19716but four lines between the @samp{5} and the @samp{10} (lines 6, 7, 8,
19717and 9). It is better to say that we want a number and a tic mark on
19718the base line (number 1) and then that we want a number and a tic on
19719the fifth line from the bottom and on every line that is a multiple of
19720five.
19721
8cda6f8f 19722@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 19723@node Height of label
8cda6f8f
GM
19724@unnumberedsubsec What height should the label be?
19725@end ifnottex
19726
19727The next issue is what height the label should be? Suppose the maximum
19728height of tallest column of the graph is seven. Should the highest
19729label on the Y axis be @samp{5 -}, and should the graph stick up above
19730the label? Or should the highest label be @samp{7 -}, and mark the peak
19731of the graph? Or should the highest label be @code{10 -}, which is a
19732multiple of five, and be higher than the topmost value of the graph?
19733
19734The latter form is preferred. Most graphs are drawn within rectangles
19735whose sides are an integral number of steps long---5, 10, 15, and so
19736on for a step distance of five. But as soon as we decide to use a
19737step height for the vertical axis, we discover that the simple
19738expression in the varlist for computing the height is wrong. The
19739expression is @code{(apply 'max numbers-list)}. This returns the
19740precise height, not the maximum height plus whatever is necessary to
19741round up to the nearest multiple of five. A more complex expression
19742is required.
19743
19744As usual in cases like this, a complex problem becomes simpler if it is
19745divided into several smaller problems.
19746
19747First, consider the case when the highest value of the graph is an
19748integral multiple of five---when it is 5, 10, 15, or some higher
19749multiple of five. We can use this value as the Y axis height.
19750
19751A fairly simply way to determine whether a number is a multiple of
19752five is to divide it by five and see if the division results in a
19753remainder. If there is no remainder, the number is a multiple of
19754five. Thus, seven divided by five has a remainder of two, and seven
19755is not an integral multiple of five. Put in slightly different
19756language, more reminiscent of the classroom, five goes into seven
19757once, with a remainder of two. However, five goes into ten twice,
19758with no remainder: ten is an integral multiple of five.
19759
d6adf7e7 19760@node Compute a Remainder
8cda6f8f
GM
19761@appendixsubsec Side Trip: Compute a Remainder
19762
19763@findex % @r{(remainder function)}
19764@cindex Remainder function, @code{%}
19765In Lisp, the function for computing a remainder is @code{%}. The
19766function returns the remainder of its first argument divided by its
19767second argument. As it happens, @code{%} is a function in Emacs Lisp
19768that you cannot discover using @code{apropos}: you find nothing if you
19769type @kbd{M-x apropos @key{RET} remainder @key{RET}}. The only way to
19770learn of the existence of @code{%} is to read about it in a book such
19771as this or in the Emacs Lisp sources.
19772
19773You can try the @code{%} function by evaluating the following two
19774expressions:
19775
19776@smallexample
19777@group
19778(% 7 5)
19779
19780(% 10 5)
19781@end group
19782@end smallexample
19783
19784@noindent
19785The first expression returns 2 and the second expression returns 0.
19786
19787To test whether the returned value is zero or some other number, we
19788can use the @code{zerop} function. This function returns @code{t} if
19789its argument, which must be a number, is zero.
19790
19791@smallexample
19792@group
19793(zerop (% 7 5))
19794 @result{} nil
19795
19796(zerop (% 10 5))
19797 @result{} t
19798@end group
19799@end smallexample
19800
19801Thus, the following expression will return @code{t} if the height
19802of the graph is evenly divisible by five:
19803
19804@smallexample
19805(zerop (% height 5))
19806@end smallexample
19807
19808@noindent
19809(The value of @code{height}, of course, can be found from @code{(apply
19810'max numbers-list)}.)
19811
19812On the other hand, if the value of @code{height} is not a multiple of
19813five, we want to reset the value to the next higher multiple of five.
19814This is straightforward arithmetic using functions with which we are
19815already familiar. First, we divide the value of @code{height} by five
19816to determine how many times five goes into the number. Thus, five
19817goes into twelve twice. If we add one to this quotient and multiply by
19818five, we will obtain the value of the next multiple of five that is
19819larger than the height. Five goes into twelve twice. Add one to two,
19820and multiply by five; the result is fifteen, which is the next multiple
19821of five that is higher than twelve. The Lisp expression for this is:
19822
19823@smallexample
19824(* (1+ (/ height 5)) 5)
19825@end smallexample
19826
19827@noindent
19828For example, if you evaluate the following, the result is 15:
19829
19830@smallexample
19831(* (1+ (/ 12 5)) 5)
19832@end smallexample
19833
19834All through this discussion, we have been using `five' as the value
19835for spacing labels on the Y axis; but we may want to use some other
19836value. For generality, we should replace `five' with a variable to
19837which we can assign a value. The best name I can think of for this
19838variable is @code{Y-axis-label-spacing}.
19839
19840@need 1250
19841Using this term, and an @code{if} expression, we produce the
19842following:
19843
19844@smallexample
19845@group
19846(if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
19847 height
19848 ;; @r{else}
19849 (* (1+ (/ height Y-axis-label-spacing))
19850 Y-axis-label-spacing))
19851@end group
19852@end smallexample
19853
19854@noindent
19855This expression returns the value of @code{height} itself if the height
19856is an even multiple of the value of the @code{Y-axis-label-spacing} or
19857else it computes and returns a value of @code{height} that is equal to
19858the next higher multiple of the value of the @code{Y-axis-label-spacing}.
19859
19860We can now include this expression in the @code{let} expression of the
19861@code{print-graph} function (after first setting the value of
19862@code{Y-axis-label-spacing}):
19863@vindex Y-axis-label-spacing
19864
19865@smallexample
19866@group
19867(defvar Y-axis-label-spacing 5
19868 "Number of lines from one Y axis label to next.")
19869@end group
19870
19871@group
19872@dots{}
19873(let* ((height (apply 'max numbers-list))
19874 (height-of-top-line
19875 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
19876 height
19877@end group
19878@group
19879 ;; @r{else}
19880 (* (1+ (/ height Y-axis-label-spacing))
19881 Y-axis-label-spacing)))
19882 (symbol-width (length graph-blank))))
19883@dots{}
19884@end group
19885@end smallexample
19886
19887@noindent
19888(Note use of the @code{let*} function: the initial value of height is
19889computed once by the @code{(apply 'max numbers-list)} expression and
19890then the resulting value of @code{height} is used to compute its
19891final value. @xref{fwd-para let, , The @code{let*} expression}, for
19892more about @code{let*}.)
19893
d6adf7e7 19894@node Y Axis Element
8cda6f8f
GM
19895@appendixsubsec Construct a Y Axis Element
19896
19897When we print the vertical axis, we want to insert strings such as
19898@w{@samp{5 -}} and @w{@samp{10 - }} every five lines.
19899Moreover, we want the numbers and dashes to line up, so shorter
19900numbers must be padded with leading spaces. If some of the strings
19901use two digit numbers, the strings with single digit numbers must
19902include a leading blank space before the number.
19903
19904@findex number-to-string
19905To figure out the length of the number, the @code{length} function is
19906used. But the @code{length} function works only with a string, not with
19907a number. So the number has to be converted from being a number to
19908being a string. This is done with the @code{number-to-string} function.
19909For example,
19910
19911@smallexample
19912@group
19913(length (number-to-string 35))
19914 @result{} 2
19915
19916(length (number-to-string 100))
19917 @result{} 3
19918@end group
19919@end smallexample
19920
19921@noindent
19922(@code{number-to-string} is also called @code{int-to-string}; you will
19923see this alternative name in various sources.)
19924
19925In addition, in each label, each number is followed by a string such
19926as @w{@samp{ - }}, which we will call the @code{Y-axis-tic} marker.
19927This variable is defined with @code{defvar}:
19928
19929@vindex Y-axis-tic
19930@smallexample
19931@group
19932(defvar Y-axis-tic " - "
19933 "String that follows number in a Y axis label.")
19934@end group
19935@end smallexample
19936
19937The length of the Y label is the sum of the length of the Y axis tic
19938mark and the length of the number of the top of the graph.
19939
19940@smallexample
19941(length (concat (number-to-string height) Y-axis-tic)))
19942@end smallexample
19943
19944This value will be calculated by the @code{print-graph} function in
19945its varlist as @code{full-Y-label-width} and passed on. (Note that we
19946did not think to include this in the varlist when we first proposed it.)
19947
19948To make a complete vertical axis label, a tic mark is concatenated
19949with a number; and the two together may be preceded by one or more
19950spaces depending on how long the number is. The label consists of
19951three parts: the (optional) leading spaces, the number, and the tic
19952mark. The function is passed the value of the number for the specific
19953row, and the value of the width of the top line, which is calculated
19954(just once) by @code{print-graph}.
19955
19956@smallexample
19957@group
19958(defun Y-axis-element (number full-Y-label-width)
19959 "Construct a NUMBERed label element.
19960A numbered element looks like this ` 5 - ',
19961and is padded as needed so all line up with
19962the element for the largest number."
19963@end group
19964@group
19965 (let* ((leading-spaces
19966 (- full-Y-label-width
19967 (length
19968 (concat (number-to-string number)
19969 Y-axis-tic)))))
19970@end group
19971@group
19972 (concat
19973 (make-string leading-spaces ? )
19974 (number-to-string number)
19975 Y-axis-tic)))
19976@end group
19977@end smallexample
19978
19979The @code{Y-axis-element} function concatenates together the leading
19980spaces, if any; the number, as a string; and the tic mark.
19981
19982To figure out how many leading spaces the label will need, the
19983function subtracts the actual length of the label---the length of the
19984number plus the length of the tic mark---from the desired label width.
19985
19986@findex make-string
19987Blank spaces are inserted using the @code{make-string} function. This
19988function takes two arguments: the first tells it how long the string
19989will be and the second is a symbol for the character to insert, in a
19990special format. The format is a question mark followed by a blank
19991space, like this, @samp{? }. @xref{Character Type, , Character Type,
19992elisp, The GNU Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for a description of the
19993syntax for characters. (Of course, you might want to replace the
19994blank space by some other character @dots{} You know what to do.)
19995
19996The @code{number-to-string} function is used in the concatenation
19997expression, to convert the number to a string that is concatenated
19998with the leading spaces and the tic mark.
19999
d6adf7e7 20000@node Y-axis-column
8cda6f8f
GM
20001@appendixsubsec Create a Y Axis Column
20002
20003The preceding functions provide all the tools needed to construct a
20004function that generates a list of numbered and blank strings to insert
20005as the label for the vertical axis:
20006
20007@findex Y-axis-column
20008@smallexample
20009@group
20010(defun Y-axis-column (height width-of-label)
20011 "Construct list of Y axis labels and blank strings.
20012For HEIGHT of line above base and WIDTH-OF-LABEL."
20013 (let (Y-axis)
20014@group
20015@end group
20016 (while (> height 1)
20017 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
20018 ;; @r{Insert label.}
20019 (setq Y-axis
20020 (cons
20021 (Y-axis-element height width-of-label)
20022 Y-axis))
20023@group
20024@end group
20025 ;; @r{Else, insert blanks.}
20026 (setq Y-axis
20027 (cons
20028 (make-string width-of-label ? )
20029 Y-axis)))
20030 (setq height (1- height)))
20031 ;; @r{Insert base line.}
20032 (setq Y-axis
20033 (cons (Y-axis-element 1 width-of-label) Y-axis))
20034 (nreverse Y-axis)))
20035@end group
20036@end smallexample
20037
20038In this function, we start with the value of @code{height} and
20039repetitively subtract one from its value. After each subtraction, we
20040test to see whether the value is an integral multiple of the
20041@code{Y-axis-label-spacing}. If it is, we construct a numbered label
20042using the @code{Y-axis-element} function; if not, we construct a
20043blank label using the @code{make-string} function. The base line
20044consists of the number one followed by a tic mark.
20045
20046@need 2000
d6adf7e7 20047@node print-Y-axis Penultimate
8cda6f8f
GM
20048@appendixsubsec The Not Quite Final Version of @code{print-Y-axis}
20049
20050The list constructed by the @code{Y-axis-column} function is passed to
20051the @code{print-Y-axis} function, which inserts the list as a column.
20052
20053@findex print-Y-axis
20054@smallexample
20055@group
20056(defun print-Y-axis (height full-Y-label-width)
20057 "Insert Y axis using HEIGHT and FULL-Y-LABEL-WIDTH.
20058Height must be the maximum height of the graph.
20059Full width is the width of the highest label element."
20060;; Value of height and full-Y-label-width
20061;; are passed by `print-graph'.
20062@end group
20063@group
20064 (let ((start (point)))
20065 (insert-rectangle
20066 (Y-axis-column height full-Y-label-width))
20067 ;; @r{Place point ready for inserting graph.}
20068 (goto-char start)
20069 ;; @r{Move point forward by value of} full-Y-label-width
20070 (forward-char full-Y-label-width)))
20071@end group
20072@end smallexample
20073
20074The @code{print-Y-axis} uses the @code{insert-rectangle} function to
20075insert the Y axis labels created by the @code{Y-axis-column} function.
20076In addition, it places point at the correct position for printing the body of
20077the graph.
20078
20079You can test @code{print-Y-axis}:
20080
20081@enumerate
20082@item
20083Install
20084
20085@smallexample
20086@group
20087Y-axis-label-spacing
20088Y-axis-tic
20089Y-axis-element
20090Y-axis-column
20091print-Y-axis
20092@end group
20093@end smallexample
20094
20095@item
20096Copy the following expression:
20097
20098@smallexample
20099(print-Y-axis 12 5)
20100@end smallexample
20101
20102@item
20103Switch to the @file{*scratch*} buffer and place the cursor where you
20104want the axis labels to start.
20105
20106@item
20107Type @kbd{M-:} (@code{eval-expression}).
20108
20109@item
20110Yank the @code{graph-body-print} expression into the minibuffer
20111with @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank)}.
20112
20113@item
20114Press @key{RET} to evaluate the expression.
20115@end enumerate
20116
20117Emacs will print labels vertically, the top one being @w{@samp{10 -@w{
20118}}}. (The @code{print-graph} function will pass the value of
20119@code{height-of-top-line}, which in this case will end up as 15,
20120thereby getting rid of what might appear as a bug.)
20121
20122@need 2000
d6adf7e7 20123@node print-X-axis
8cda6f8f
GM
20124@appendixsec The @code{print-X-axis} Function
20125@cindex Axis, print horizontal
20126@cindex X axis printing
20127@cindex Print horizontal axis
20128@cindex Horizontal axis printing
20129
20130X axis labels are much like Y axis labels, except that the ticks are on a
20131line above the numbers. Labels should look like this:
20132
20133@smallexample
20134@group
20135 | | | |
20136 1 5 10 15
20137@end group
20138@end smallexample
20139
20140The first tic is under the first column of the graph and is preceded by
20141several blank spaces. These spaces provide room in rows above for the Y
20142axis labels. The second, third, fourth, and subsequent ticks are all
20143spaced equally, according to the value of @code{X-axis-label-spacing}.
20144
20145The second row of the X axis consists of numbers, preceded by several
20146blank spaces and also separated according to the value of the variable
20147@code{X-axis-label-spacing}.
20148
20149The value of the variable @code{X-axis-label-spacing} should itself be
20150measured in units of @code{symbol-width}, since you may want to change
20151the width of the symbols that you are using to print the body of the
09e80d9f 20152graph without changing the ways the graph is labeled.
8cda6f8f
GM
20153
20154@menu
20155* Similarities differences:: Much like @code{print-Y-axis}, but not exactly.
20156* X Axis Tic Marks:: Create tic marks for the horizontal axis.
20157@end menu
20158
8cda6f8f 20159@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 20160@node Similarities differences
8cda6f8f
GM
20161@unnumberedsubsec Similarities and differences
20162@end ifnottex
20163
20164The @code{print-X-axis} function is constructed in more or less the
20165same fashion as the @code{print-Y-axis} function except that it has
20166two lines: the line of tic marks and the numbers. We will write a
20167separate function to print each line and then combine them within the
20168@code{print-X-axis} function.
20169
20170This is a three step process:
20171
20172@enumerate
20173@item
20174Write a function to print the X axis tic marks, @code{print-X-axis-tic-line}.
20175
20176@item
20177Write a function to print the X numbers, @code{print-X-axis-numbered-line}.
20178
20179@item
20180Write a function to print both lines, the @code{print-X-axis} function,
20181using @code{print-X-axis-tic-line} and
20182@code{print-X-axis-numbered-line}.
20183@end enumerate
20184
d6adf7e7 20185@node X Axis Tic Marks
8cda6f8f
GM
20186@appendixsubsec X Axis Tic Marks
20187
20188The first function should print the X axis tic marks. We must specify
20189the tic marks themselves and their spacing:
20190
20191@smallexample
20192@group
20193(defvar X-axis-label-spacing
20194 (if (boundp 'graph-blank)
20195 (* 5 (length graph-blank)) 5)
20196 "Number of units from one X axis label to next.")
20197@end group
20198@end smallexample
20199
20200@noindent
20201(Note that the value of @code{graph-blank} is set by another
20202@code{defvar}. The @code{boundp} predicate checks whether it has
20203already been set; @code{boundp} returns @code{nil} if it has not. If
20204@code{graph-blank} were unbound and we did not use this conditional
20205construction, in a recent GNU Emacs, we would enter the debugger and
20206see an error message saying @samp{@w{Debugger entered--Lisp error:}
20207@w{(void-variable graph-blank)}}.)
20208
20209@need 1200
20210Here is the @code{defvar} for @code{X-axis-tic-symbol}:
20211
20212@smallexample
20213@group
20214(defvar X-axis-tic-symbol "|"
20215 "String to insert to point to a column in X axis.")
20216@end group
20217@end smallexample
20218
20219@need 1250
20220The goal is to make a line that looks like this:
20221
20222@smallexample
20223 | | | |
20224@end smallexample
20225
20226The first tic is indented so that it is under the first column, which is
20227indented to provide space for the Y axis labels.
20228
20229A tic element consists of the blank spaces that stretch from one tic to
20230the next plus a tic symbol. The number of blanks is determined by the
20231width of the tic symbol and the @code{X-axis-label-spacing}.
20232
20233@need 1250
20234The code looks like this:
20235
20236@smallexample
20237@group
20238;;; X-axis-tic-element
20239@dots{}
20240(concat
20241 (make-string
20242 ;; @r{Make a string of blanks.}
20243 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
20244 (length X-axis-tic-symbol))
20245 ? )
20246 ;; @r{Concatenate blanks with tic symbol.}
20247 X-axis-tic-symbol)
20248@dots{}
20249@end group
20250@end smallexample
20251
20252Next, we determine how many blanks are needed to indent the first tic
20253mark to the first column of the graph. This uses the value of
20254@code{full-Y-label-width} passed it by the @code{print-graph} function.
20255
20256@need 1250
20257The code to make @code{X-axis-leading-spaces}
20258looks like this:
20259
20260@smallexample
20261@group
20262;; X-axis-leading-spaces
20263@dots{}
20264(make-string full-Y-label-width ? )
20265@dots{}
20266@end group
20267@end smallexample
20268
20269We also need to determine the length of the horizontal axis, which is
20270the length of the numbers list, and the number of ticks in the horizontal
20271axis:
20272
20273@smallexample
20274@group
20275;; X-length
20276@dots{}
20277(length numbers-list)
20278@end group
20279
20280@group
20281;; tic-width
20282@dots{}
20283(* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
20284@end group
20285
20286@group
20287;; number-of-X-ticks
20288(if (zerop (% (X-length tic-width)))
20289 (/ (X-length tic-width))
20290 (1+ (/ (X-length tic-width))))
20291@end group
20292@end smallexample
20293
20294@need 1250
20295All this leads us directly to the function for printing the X axis tic line:
20296
20297@findex print-X-axis-tic-line
20298@smallexample
20299@group
20300(defun print-X-axis-tic-line
20301 (number-of-X-tics X-axis-leading-spaces X-axis-tic-element)
20302 "Print ticks for X axis."
20303 (insert X-axis-leading-spaces)
20304 (insert X-axis-tic-symbol) ; @r{Under first column.}
20305@end group
20306@group
20307 ;; @r{Insert second tic in the right spot.}
20308 (insert (concat
20309 (make-string
20310 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
20311 ;; @r{Insert white space up to second tic symbol.}
20312 (* 2 (length X-axis-tic-symbol)))
20313 ? )
20314 X-axis-tic-symbol))
20315@end group
20316@group
20317 ;; @r{Insert remaining ticks.}
20318 (while (> number-of-X-tics 1)
20319 (insert X-axis-tic-element)
20320 (setq number-of-X-tics (1- number-of-X-tics))))
20321@end group
20322@end smallexample
20323
20324The line of numbers is equally straightforward:
20325
20326@need 1250
20327First, we create a numbered element with blank spaces before each number:
20328
20329@findex X-axis-element
20330@smallexample
20331@group
20332(defun X-axis-element (number)
20333 "Construct a numbered X axis element."
20334 (let ((leading-spaces
20335 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
20336 (length (number-to-string number)))))
20337 (concat (make-string leading-spaces ? )
20338 (number-to-string number))))
20339@end group
20340@end smallexample
20341
20342Next, we create the function to print the numbered line, starting with
20343the number ``1'' under the first column:
20344
20345@findex print-X-axis-numbered-line
20346@smallexample
20347@group
20348(defun print-X-axis-numbered-line
20349 (number-of-X-tics X-axis-leading-spaces)
20350 "Print line of X-axis numbers"
20351 (let ((number X-axis-label-spacing))
20352 (insert X-axis-leading-spaces)
20353 (insert "1")
20354@end group
20355@group
20356 (insert (concat
20357 (make-string
20358 ;; @r{Insert white space up to next number.}
20359 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing) 2)
20360 ? )
20361 (number-to-string number)))
20362@end group
20363@group
20364 ;; @r{Insert remaining numbers.}
20365 (setq number (+ number X-axis-label-spacing))
20366 (while (> number-of-X-tics 1)
20367 (insert (X-axis-element number))
20368 (setq number (+ number X-axis-label-spacing))
20369 (setq number-of-X-tics (1- number-of-X-tics)))))
20370@end group
20371@end smallexample
20372
20373Finally, we need to write the @code{print-X-axis} that uses
20374@code{print-X-axis-tic-line} and
20375@code{print-X-axis-numbered-line}.
20376
20377The function must determine the local values of the variables used by both
20378@code{print-X-axis-tic-line} and @code{print-X-axis-numbered-line}, and
20379then it must call them. Also, it must print the carriage return that
20380separates the two lines.
20381
20382The function consists of a varlist that specifies five local variables,
20383and calls to each of the two line printing functions:
20384
20385@findex print-X-axis
20386@smallexample
20387@group
20388(defun print-X-axis (numbers-list)
20389 "Print X axis labels to length of NUMBERS-LIST."
20390 (let* ((leading-spaces
20391 (make-string full-Y-label-width ? ))
20392@end group
20393@group
20394 ;; symbol-width @r{is provided by} graph-body-print
20395 (tic-width (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing))
20396 (X-length (length numbers-list))
20397@end group
20398@group
20399 (X-tic
20400 (concat
20401 (make-string
20402@end group
20403@group
20404 ;; @r{Make a string of blanks.}
20405 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
20406 (length X-axis-tic-symbol))
20407 ? )
20408@end group
20409@group
20410 ;; @r{Concatenate blanks with tic symbol.}
20411 X-axis-tic-symbol))
20412@end group
20413@group
20414 (tic-number
20415 (if (zerop (% X-length tic-width))
20416 (/ X-length tic-width)
20417 (1+ (/ X-length tic-width)))))
20418@end group
20419@group
20420 (print-X-axis-tic-line tic-number leading-spaces X-tic)
20421 (insert "\n")
20422 (print-X-axis-numbered-line tic-number leading-spaces)))
20423@end group
20424@end smallexample
20425
20426@need 1250
20427You can test @code{print-X-axis}:
20428
20429@enumerate
20430@item
20431Install @code{X-axis-tic-symbol}, @code{X-axis-label-spacing},
20432@code{print-X-axis-tic-line}, as well as @code{X-axis-element},
20433@code{print-X-axis-numbered-line}, and @code{print-X-axis}.
20434
20435@item
20436Copy the following expression:
20437
20438@smallexample
20439@group
20440(progn
20441 (let ((full-Y-label-width 5)
20442 (symbol-width 1))
20443 (print-X-axis
20444 '(1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16))))
20445@end group
20446@end smallexample
20447
20448@item
20449Switch to the @file{*scratch*} buffer and place the cursor where you
20450want the axis labels to start.
20451
20452@item
20453Type @kbd{M-:} (@code{eval-expression}).
20454
20455@item
20456Yank the test expression into the minibuffer
20457with @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank)}.
20458
20459@item
20460Press @key{RET} to evaluate the expression.
20461@end enumerate
20462
20463@need 1250
20464Emacs will print the horizontal axis like this:
20465@sp 1
20466
20467@smallexample
20468@group
20469 | | | | |
20470 1 5 10 15 20
20471@end group
20472@end smallexample
20473
d6adf7e7 20474@node Print Whole Graph
8cda6f8f
GM
20475@appendixsec Printing the Whole Graph
20476@cindex Printing the whole graph
20477@cindex Whole graph printing
20478@cindex Graph, printing all
20479
20480Now we are nearly ready to print the whole graph.
20481
20482The function to print the graph with the proper labels follows the
09e80d9f 20483outline we created earlier (@pxref{Full Graph, , A Graph with Labeled
8cda6f8f
GM
20484Axes}), but with additions.
20485
20486@need 1250
20487Here is the outline:
20488
20489@smallexample
20490@group
20491(defun print-graph (numbers-list)
20492 "@var{documentation}@dots{}"
20493 (let ((height @dots{}
20494 @dots{}))
20495@end group
20496@group
20497 (print-Y-axis height @dots{} )
20498 (graph-body-print numbers-list)
20499 (print-X-axis @dots{} )))
20500@end group
20501@end smallexample
20502
20503@menu
20504* The final version:: A few changes.
20505* Test print-graph:: Run a short test.
20506* Graphing words in defuns:: Executing the final code.
20507* lambda:: How to write an anonymous function.
20508* mapcar:: Apply a function to elements of a list.
20509* Another Bug:: Yet another bug @dots{} most insidious.
20510* Final printed graph:: The graph itself!
20511@end menu
20512
8cda6f8f 20513@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 20514@node The final version
8cda6f8f
GM
20515@unnumberedsubsec Changes for the Final Version
20516@end ifnottex
20517
20518The final version is different from what we planned in two ways:
20519first, it contains additional values calculated once in the varlist;
20520second, it carries an option to specify the labels' increment per row.
20521This latter feature turns out to be essential; otherwise, a graph may
20522have more rows than fit on a display or on a sheet of paper.
20523
20524@need 1500
20525This new feature requires a change to the @code{Y-axis-column}
20526function, to add @code{vertical-step} to it. The function looks like
20527this:
20528
20529@findex Y-axis-column @r{Final version.}
20530@smallexample
20531@group
20532;;; @r{Final version.}
20533(defun Y-axis-column
20534 (height width-of-label &optional vertical-step)
20535 "Construct list of labels for Y axis.
20536HEIGHT is maximum height of graph.
20537WIDTH-OF-LABEL is maximum width of label.
20538VERTICAL-STEP, an option, is a positive integer
20539that specifies how much a Y axis label increments
20540for each line. For example, a step of 5 means
20541that each line is five units of the graph."
20542@end group
20543@group
20544 (let (Y-axis
20545 (number-per-line (or vertical-step 1)))
20546 (while (> height 1)
20547 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
20548@end group
20549@group
20550 ;; @r{Insert label.}
20551 (setq Y-axis
20552 (cons
20553 (Y-axis-element
20554 (* height number-per-line)
20555 width-of-label)
20556 Y-axis))
20557@end group
20558@group
20559 ;; @r{Else, insert blanks.}
20560 (setq Y-axis
20561 (cons
20562 (make-string width-of-label ? )
20563 Y-axis)))
20564 (setq height (1- height)))
20565@end group
20566@group
20567 ;; @r{Insert base line.}
20568 (setq Y-axis (cons (Y-axis-element
20569 (or vertical-step 1)
20570 width-of-label)
20571 Y-axis))
20572 (nreverse Y-axis)))
20573@end group
20574@end smallexample
20575
20576The values for the maximum height of graph and the width of a symbol
20577are computed by @code{print-graph} in its @code{let} expression; so
20578@code{graph-body-print} must be changed to accept them.
20579
20580@findex graph-body-print @r{Final version.}
20581@smallexample
20582@group
20583;;; @r{Final version.}
20584(defun graph-body-print (numbers-list height symbol-width)
20585 "Print a bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
20586The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values.
20587HEIGHT is maximum height of graph.
20588SYMBOL-WIDTH is number of each column."
20589@end group
20590@group
20591 (let (from-position)
20592 (while numbers-list
20593 (setq from-position (point))
20594 (insert-rectangle
20595 (column-of-graph height (car numbers-list)))
20596 (goto-char from-position)
20597 (forward-char symbol-width)
20598@end group
20599@group
20600 ;; @r{Draw graph column by column.}
20601 (sit-for 0)
20602 (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)))
20603 ;; @r{Place point for X axis labels.}
20604 (forward-line height)
20605 (insert "\n")))
20606@end group
20607@end smallexample
20608
20609@need 1250
20610Finally, the code for the @code{print-graph} function:
20611
20612@findex print-graph @r{Final version.}
20613@smallexample
20614@group
20615;;; @r{Final version.}
20616(defun print-graph
20617 (numbers-list &optional vertical-step)
09e80d9f 20618 "Print labeled bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
8cda6f8f
GM
20619The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values.
20620@end group
20621
20622@group
20623Optionally, VERTICAL-STEP, a positive integer,
20624specifies how much a Y axis label increments for
20625each line. For example, a step of 5 means that
20626each row is five units."
20627@end group
20628@group
20629 (let* ((symbol-width (length graph-blank))
20630 ;; @code{height} @r{is both the largest number}
20631 ;; @r{and the number with the most digits.}
20632 (height (apply 'max numbers-list))
20633@end group
20634@group
20635 (height-of-top-line
20636 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
20637 height
20638 ;; @r{else}
20639 (* (1+ (/ height Y-axis-label-spacing))
20640 Y-axis-label-spacing)))
20641@end group
20642@group
20643 (vertical-step (or vertical-step 1))
20644 (full-Y-label-width
20645 (length
20646@end group
20647@group
20648 (concat
20649 (number-to-string
20650 (* height-of-top-line vertical-step))
20651 Y-axis-tic))))
20652@end group
20653
20654@group
20655 (print-Y-axis
20656 height-of-top-line full-Y-label-width vertical-step)
20657@end group
20658@group
20659 (graph-body-print
20660 numbers-list height-of-top-line symbol-width)
20661 (print-X-axis numbers-list)))
20662@end group
20663@end smallexample
20664
d6adf7e7 20665@node Test print-graph
8cda6f8f
GM
20666@appendixsubsec Testing @code{print-graph}
20667
20668@need 1250
20669We can test the @code{print-graph} function with a short list of numbers:
20670
20671@enumerate
20672@item
20673Install the final versions of @code{Y-axis-column},
20674@code{graph-body-print}, and @code{print-graph} (in addition to the
20675rest of the code.)
20676
20677@item
20678Copy the following expression:
20679
20680@smallexample
20681(print-graph '(3 2 5 6 7 5 3 4 6 4 3 2 1))
20682@end smallexample
20683
20684@item
20685Switch to the @file{*scratch*} buffer and place the cursor where you
20686want the axis labels to start.
20687
20688@item
20689Type @kbd{M-:} (@code{eval-expression}).
20690
20691@item
20692Yank the test expression into the minibuffer
20693with @kbd{C-y} (@code{yank)}.
20694
20695@item
20696Press @key{RET} to evaluate the expression.
20697@end enumerate
20698
20699@need 1250
20700Emacs will print a graph that looks like this:
20701
20702@smallexample
20703@group
2070410 -
20705
20706
20707 *
20708 ** *
20709 5 - **** *
20710 **** ***
20711 * *********
20712 ************
20713 1 - *************
20714
20715 | | | |
20716 1 5 10 15
20717@end group
20718@end smallexample
20719
20720@need 1200
20721On the other hand, if you pass @code{print-graph} a
20722@code{vertical-step} value of 2, by evaluating this expression:
20723
20724@smallexample
20725(print-graph '(3 2 5 6 7 5 3 4 6 4 3 2 1) 2)
20726@end smallexample
20727
20728@need 1250
20729@noindent
20730The graph looks like this:
20731
20732@smallexample
20733@group
2073420 -
20735
20736
20737 *
20738 ** *
2073910 - **** *
20740 **** ***
20741 * *********
20742 ************
20743 2 - *************
20744
20745 | | | |
20746 1 5 10 15
20747@end group
20748@end smallexample
20749
20750@noindent
20751(A question: is the `2' on the bottom of the vertical axis a bug or a
20752feature? If you think it is a bug, and should be a `1' instead, (or
20753even a `0'), you can modify the sources.)
20754
d6adf7e7 20755@node Graphing words in defuns
8cda6f8f
GM
20756@appendixsubsec Graphing Numbers of Words and Symbols
20757
20758Now for the graph for which all this code was written: a graph that
20759shows how many function definitions contain fewer than 10 words and
20760symbols, how many contain between 10 and 19 words and symbols, how
20761many contain between 20 and 29 words and symbols, and so on.
20762
20763This is a multi-step process. First make sure you have loaded all the
20764requisite code.
20765
20766@need 1500
20767It is a good idea to reset the value of @code{top-of-ranges} in case
20768you have set it to some different value. You can evaluate the
20769following:
20770
20771@smallexample
20772@group
20773(setq top-of-ranges
20774 '(10 20 30 40 50
20775 60 70 80 90 100
20776 110 120 130 140 150
20777 160 170 180 190 200
20778 210 220 230 240 250
20779 260 270 280 290 300)
20780@end group
20781@end smallexample
20782
20783@noindent
20784Next create a list of the number of words and symbols in each range.
20785
20786@need 1500
20787@noindent
20788Evaluate the following:
20789
20790@smallexample
20791@group
20792(setq list-for-graph
20793 (defuns-per-range
20794 (sort
20795 (recursive-lengths-list-many-files
20796 (directory-files "/usr/local/emacs/lisp"
20797 t ".+el$"))
20798 '<)
20799 top-of-ranges))
20800@end group
20801@end smallexample
20802
20803@noindent
20804On my old machine, this took about an hour. It looked though 303 Lisp
20805files in my copy of Emacs version 19.23. After all that computing,
20806the @code{list-for-graph} had this value:
20807
20808@smallexample
20809@group
20810(537 1027 955 785 594 483 349 292 224 199 166 120 116 99
2081190 80 67 48 52 45 41 33 28 26 25 20 12 28 11 13 220)
20812@end group
20813@end smallexample
20814
20815@noindent
20816This means that my copy of Emacs had 537 function definitions with
20817fewer than 10 words or symbols in them, 1,027 function definitions
20818with 10 to 19 words or symbols in them, 955 function definitions with
2081920 to 29 words or symbols in them, and so on.
20820
20821Clearly, just by looking at this list we can see that most function
20822definitions contain ten to thirty words and symbols.
20823
20824Now for printing. We do @emph{not} want to print a graph that is
208251,030 lines high @dots{} Instead, we should print a graph that is
20826fewer than twenty-five lines high. A graph that height can be
20827displayed on almost any monitor, and easily printed on a sheet of paper.
20828
20829This means that each value in @code{list-for-graph} must be reduced to
20830one-fiftieth its present value.
20831
20832Here is a short function to do just that, using two functions we have
20833not yet seen, @code{mapcar} and @code{lambda}.
20834
20835@smallexample
20836@group
20837(defun one-fiftieth (full-range)
20838 "Return list, each number one-fiftieth of previous."
d1069532 20839 (mapcar (lambda (arg) (/ arg 50)) full-range))
8cda6f8f
GM
20840@end group
20841@end smallexample
20842
d6adf7e7 20843@node lambda
8cda6f8f
GM
20844@appendixsubsec A @code{lambda} Expression: Useful Anonymity
20845@cindex Anonymous function
20846@findex lambda
20847
20848@code{lambda} is the symbol for an anonymous function, a function
20849without a name. Every time you use an anonymous function, you need to
20850include its whole body.
20851
20852@need 1250
20853@noindent
20854Thus,
20855
20856@smallexample
20857(lambda (arg) (/ arg 50))
20858@end smallexample
20859
20860@noindent
20861is a function definition that says `return the value resulting from
20862dividing whatever is passed to me as @code{arg} by 50'.
20863
20864@need 1200
20865Earlier, for example, we had a function @code{multiply-by-seven}; it
20866multiplied its argument by 7. This function is similar, except it
20867divides its argument by 50; and, it has no name. The anonymous
20868equivalent of @code{multiply-by-seven} is:
20869
20870@smallexample
20871(lambda (number) (* 7 number))
20872@end smallexample
20873
20874@noindent
edbf4569 20875(@xref{defun, , The @code{defun} Macro}.)
8cda6f8f
GM
20876
20877@need 1250
20878@noindent
20879If we want to multiply 3 by 7, we can write:
20880
20881@c !!! Clear print-postscript-figures if the computer formatting this
20882@c document is too small and cannot handle all the diagrams and figures.
20883@c clear print-postscript-figures
20884@c set print-postscript-figures
20885@c lambda example diagram #1
20886@ifnottex
20887@smallexample
20888@group
20889(multiply-by-seven 3)
20890 \_______________/ ^
20891 | |
20892 function argument
20893@end group
20894@end smallexample
20895@end ifnottex
20896@ifset print-postscript-figures
20897@sp 1
20898@tex
20899@center @image{lambda-1}
20900%%%% old method of including an image
20901% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
20902% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/lambda-1.eps}}
20903% \catcode`\@=0 %
20904@end tex
20905@sp 1
20906@end ifset
20907@ifclear print-postscript-figures
20908@iftex
20909@smallexample
20910@group
20911(multiply-by-seven 3)
20912 \_______________/ ^
20913 | |
20914 function argument
20915@end group
20916@end smallexample
20917@end iftex
20918@end ifclear
20919
20920@noindent
20921This expression returns 21.
20922
20923@need 1250
20924@noindent
20925Similarly, we can write:
20926
20927@c lambda example diagram #2
20928@ifnottex
20929@smallexample
20930@group
20931((lambda (number) (* 7 number)) 3)
20932 \____________________________/ ^
20933 | |
20934 anonymous function argument
20935@end group
20936@end smallexample
20937@end ifnottex
20938@ifset print-postscript-figures
20939@sp 1
20940@tex
20941@center @image{lambda-2}
20942%%%% old method of including an image
20943% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
20944% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/lambda-2.eps}}
20945% \catcode`\@=0 %
20946@end tex
20947@sp 1
20948@end ifset
20949@ifclear print-postscript-figures
20950@iftex
20951@smallexample
20952@group
20953((lambda (number) (* 7 number)) 3)
20954 \____________________________/ ^
20955 | |
20956 anonymous function argument
20957@end group
20958@end smallexample
20959@end iftex
20960@end ifclear
20961
20962@need 1250
20963@noindent
20964If we want to divide 100 by 50, we can write:
20965
20966@c lambda example diagram #3
20967@ifnottex
20968@smallexample
20969@group
20970((lambda (arg) (/ arg 50)) 100)
20971 \______________________/ \_/
20972 | |
20973 anonymous function argument
20974@end group
20975@end smallexample
20976@end ifnottex
20977@ifset print-postscript-figures
20978@sp 1
20979@tex
20980@center @image{lambda-3}
20981%%%% old method of including an image
20982% \input /usr/local/lib/tex/inputs/psfig.tex
20983% \centerline{\psfig{figure=/usr/local/lib/emacs/man/lambda-3.eps}}
20984% \catcode`\@=0 %
20985@end tex
20986@sp 1
20987@end ifset
20988@ifclear print-postscript-figures
20989@iftex
20990@smallexample
20991@group
20992((lambda (arg) (/ arg 50)) 100)
20993 \______________________/ \_/
20994 | |
20995 anonymous function argument
20996@end group
20997@end smallexample
20998@end iftex
20999@end ifclear
21000
21001@noindent
21002This expression returns 2. The 100 is passed to the function, which
21003divides that number by 50.
21004
21005@xref{Lambda Expressions, , Lambda Expressions, elisp, The GNU Emacs
21006Lisp Reference Manual}, for more about @code{lambda}. Lisp and lambda
21007expressions derive from the Lambda Calculus.
21008
d6adf7e7 21009@node mapcar
8cda6f8f
GM
21010@appendixsubsec The @code{mapcar} Function
21011@findex mapcar
21012
21013@code{mapcar} is a function that calls its first argument with each
21014element of its second argument, in turn. The second argument must be
21015a sequence.
21016
21017The @samp{map} part of the name comes from the mathematical phrase,
21018`mapping over a domain', meaning to apply a function to each of the
21019elements in a domain. The mathematical phrase is based on the
21020metaphor of a surveyor walking, one step at a time, over an area he is
21021mapping. And @samp{car}, of course, comes from the Lisp notion of the
21022first of a list.
21023
21024@need 1250
21025@noindent
21026For example,
21027
21028@smallexample
21029@group
21030(mapcar '1+ '(2 4 6))
21031 @result{} (3 5 7)
21032@end group
21033@end smallexample
21034
21035@noindent
21036The function @code{1+} which adds one to its argument, is executed on
21037@emph{each} element of the list, and a new list is returned.
21038
21039Contrast this with @code{apply}, which applies its first argument to
21040all the remaining.
21041(@xref{Readying a Graph, , Readying a Graph}, for a explanation of
21042@code{apply}.)
21043
21044@need 1250
21045In the definition of @code{one-fiftieth}, the first argument is the
21046anonymous function:
21047
21048@smallexample
21049(lambda (arg) (/ arg 50))
21050@end smallexample
21051
21052@noindent
21053and the second argument is @code{full-range}, which will be bound to
21054@code{list-for-graph}.
21055
21056@need 1250
21057The whole expression looks like this:
21058
21059@smallexample
d1069532 21060(mapcar (lambda (arg) (/ arg 50)) full-range))
8cda6f8f
GM
21061@end smallexample
21062
21063@xref{Mapping Functions, , Mapping Functions, elisp, The GNU Emacs
21064Lisp Reference Manual}, for more about @code{mapcar}.
21065
21066Using the @code{one-fiftieth} function, we can generate a list in
21067which each element is one-fiftieth the size of the corresponding
21068element in @code{list-for-graph}.
21069
21070@smallexample
21071@group
21072(setq fiftieth-list-for-graph
21073 (one-fiftieth list-for-graph))
21074@end group
21075@end smallexample
21076
21077@need 1250
21078The resulting list looks like this:
21079
21080@smallexample
21081@group
21082(10 20 19 15 11 9 6 5 4 3 3 2 2
210831 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4)
21084@end group
21085@end smallexample
21086
21087@noindent
21088This, we are almost ready to print! (We also notice the loss of
21089information: many of the higher ranges are 0, meaning that fewer than
2109050 defuns had that many words or symbols---but not necessarily meaning
21091that none had that many words or symbols.)
21092
d6adf7e7 21093@node Another Bug
8cda6f8f
GM
21094@appendixsubsec Another Bug @dots{} Most Insidious
21095@cindex Bug, most insidious type
21096@cindex Insidious type of bug
21097
21098I said `almost ready to print'! Of course, there is a bug in the
21099@code{print-graph} function @dots{} It has a @code{vertical-step}
21100option, but not a @code{horizontal-step} option. The
21101@code{top-of-range} scale goes from 10 to 300 by tens. But the
21102@code{print-graph} function will print only by ones.
21103
21104This is a classic example of what some consider the most insidious
21105type of bug, the bug of omission. This is not the kind of bug you can
21106find by studying the code, for it is not in the code; it is an omitted
21107feature. Your best actions are to try your program early and often;
21108and try to arrange, as much as you can, to write code that is easy to
21109understand and easy to change. Try to be aware, whenever you can,
21110that whatever you have written, @emph{will} be rewritten, if not soon,
21111eventually. A hard maxim to follow.
21112
21113It is the @code{print-X-axis-numbered-line} function that needs the
21114work; and then the @code{print-X-axis} and the @code{print-graph}
21115functions need to be adapted. Not much needs to be done; there is one
21116nicety: the numbers ought to line up under the tic marks. This takes
21117a little thought.
21118
21119@need 1250
21120Here is the corrected @code{print-X-axis-numbered-line}:
21121
21122@smallexample
21123@group
21124(defun print-X-axis-numbered-line
21125 (number-of-X-tics X-axis-leading-spaces
21126 &optional horizontal-step)
21127 "Print line of X-axis numbers"
21128 (let ((number X-axis-label-spacing)
21129 (horizontal-step (or horizontal-step 1)))
21130@end group
21131@group
21132 (insert X-axis-leading-spaces)
21133 ;; @r{Delete extra leading spaces.}
21134 (delete-char
21135 (- (1-
21136 (length (number-to-string horizontal-step)))))
21137 (insert (concat
21138 (make-string
21139@end group
21140@group
21141 ;; @r{Insert white space.}
21142 (- (* symbol-width
21143 X-axis-label-spacing)
21144 (1-
21145 (length
21146 (number-to-string horizontal-step)))
21147 2)
21148 ? )
21149 (number-to-string
21150 (* number horizontal-step))))
21151@end group
21152@group
21153 ;; @r{Insert remaining numbers.}
21154 (setq number (+ number X-axis-label-spacing))
21155 (while (> number-of-X-tics 1)
21156 (insert (X-axis-element
21157 (* number horizontal-step)))
21158 (setq number (+ number X-axis-label-spacing))
21159 (setq number-of-X-tics (1- number-of-X-tics)))))
21160@end group
21161@end smallexample
21162
21163@need 1500
21164If you are reading this in Info, you can see the new versions of
21165@code{print-X-axis} @code{print-graph} and evaluate them. If you are
21166reading this in a printed book, you can see the changed lines here
21167(the full text is too much to print).
21168
21169@iftex
21170@smallexample
21171@group
21172(defun print-X-axis (numbers-list horizontal-step)
21173 @dots{}
21174 (print-X-axis-numbered-line
21175 tic-number leading-spaces horizontal-step))
21176@end group
21177@end smallexample
21178
21179@smallexample
21180@group
21181(defun print-graph
21182 (numbers-list
21183 &optional vertical-step horizontal-step)
21184 @dots{}
21185 (print-X-axis numbers-list horizontal-step))
21186@end group
21187@end smallexample
21188@end iftex
21189
21190@ifnottex
21191@smallexample
21192@group
21193(defun print-X-axis (numbers-list horizontal-step)
21194 "Print X axis labels to length of NUMBERS-LIST.
21195Optionally, HORIZONTAL-STEP, a positive integer,
21196specifies how much an X axis label increments for
21197each column."
21198@end group
21199@group
21200;; Value of symbol-width and full-Y-label-width
21201;; are passed by `print-graph'.
21202 (let* ((leading-spaces
21203 (make-string full-Y-label-width ? ))
21204 ;; symbol-width @r{is provided by} graph-body-print
21205 (tic-width (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing))
21206 (X-length (length numbers-list))
21207@end group
21208@group
21209 (X-tic
21210 (concat
21211 (make-string
21212 ;; @r{Make a string of blanks.}
21213 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
21214 (length X-axis-tic-symbol))
21215 ? )
21216@end group
21217@group
21218 ;; @r{Concatenate blanks with tic symbol.}
21219 X-axis-tic-symbol))
21220 (tic-number
21221 (if (zerop (% X-length tic-width))
21222 (/ X-length tic-width)
21223 (1+ (/ X-length tic-width)))))
21224@end group
21225
21226@group
21227 (print-X-axis-tic-line
21228 tic-number leading-spaces X-tic)
21229 (insert "\n")
21230 (print-X-axis-numbered-line
21231 tic-number leading-spaces horizontal-step)))
21232@end group
21233@end smallexample
21234
21235@smallexample
21236@group
21237(defun print-graph
21238 (numbers-list &optional vertical-step horizontal-step)
09e80d9f 21239 "Print labeled bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
8cda6f8f
GM
21240The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values.
21241@end group
21242
21243@group
21244Optionally, VERTICAL-STEP, a positive integer,
21245specifies how much a Y axis label increments for
21246each line. For example, a step of 5 means that
21247each row is five units.
21248@end group
21249
21250@group
21251Optionally, HORIZONTAL-STEP, a positive integer,
21252specifies how much an X axis label increments for
21253each column."
21254 (let* ((symbol-width (length graph-blank))
21255 ;; @code{height} @r{is both the largest number}
21256 ;; @r{and the number with the most digits.}
21257 (height (apply 'max numbers-list))
21258@end group
21259@group
21260 (height-of-top-line
21261 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
21262 height
21263 ;; @r{else}
21264 (* (1+ (/ height Y-axis-label-spacing))
21265 Y-axis-label-spacing)))
21266@end group
21267@group
21268 (vertical-step (or vertical-step 1))
21269 (full-Y-label-width
21270 (length
21271 (concat
21272 (number-to-string
21273 (* height-of-top-line vertical-step))
21274 Y-axis-tic))))
21275@end group
21276@group
21277 (print-Y-axis
21278 height-of-top-line full-Y-label-width vertical-step)
21279 (graph-body-print
21280 numbers-list height-of-top-line symbol-width)
21281 (print-X-axis numbers-list horizontal-step)))
21282@end group
21283@end smallexample
21284@end ifnottex
21285
21286@c qqq
21287@ignore
21288Graphing Definitions Re-listed
21289
21290@need 1250
21291Here are all the graphing definitions in their final form:
21292
21293@smallexample
21294@group
21295(defvar top-of-ranges
21296 '(10 20 30 40 50
21297 60 70 80 90 100
21298 110 120 130 140 150
21299 160 170 180 190 200
21300 210 220 230 240 250)
21301 "List specifying ranges for `defuns-per-range'.")
21302@end group
21303
21304@group
21305(defvar graph-symbol "*"
21306 "String used as symbol in graph, usually an asterisk.")
21307@end group
21308
21309@group
21310(defvar graph-blank " "
21311 "String used as blank in graph, usually a blank space.
21312graph-blank must be the same number of columns wide
21313as graph-symbol.")
21314@end group
21315
21316@group
21317(defvar Y-axis-tic " - "
21318 "String that follows number in a Y axis label.")
21319@end group
21320
21321@group
21322(defvar Y-axis-label-spacing 5
21323 "Number of lines from one Y axis label to next.")
21324@end group
21325
21326@group
21327(defvar X-axis-tic-symbol "|"
21328 "String to insert to point to a column in X axis.")
21329@end group
21330
21331@group
21332(defvar X-axis-label-spacing
21333 (if (boundp 'graph-blank)
21334 (* 5 (length graph-blank)) 5)
21335 "Number of units from one X axis label to next.")
21336@end group
21337@end smallexample
21338
21339@smallexample
21340@group
21341(defun count-words-in-defun ()
21342 "Return the number of words and symbols in a defun."
21343 (beginning-of-defun)
21344 (let ((count 0)
21345 (end (save-excursion (end-of-defun) (point))))
21346@end group
21347
21348@group
21349 (while
21350 (and (< (point) end)
21351 (re-search-forward
21352 "\\(\\w\\|\\s_\\)+[^ \t\n]*[ \t\n]*"
21353 end t))
21354 (setq count (1+ count)))
21355 count))
21356@end group
21357@end smallexample
21358
21359@smallexample
21360@group
21361(defun lengths-list-file (filename)
21362 "Return list of definitions' lengths within FILE.
21363The returned list is a list of numbers.
21364Each number is the number of words or
21365symbols in one function definition."
21366@end group
21367
21368@group
21369 (message "Working on `%s' ... " filename)
21370 (save-excursion
21371 (let ((buffer (find-file-noselect filename))
21372 (lengths-list))
21373 (set-buffer buffer)
21374 (setq buffer-read-only t)
21375 (widen)
21376 (goto-char (point-min))
21377@end group
21378
21379@group
21380 (while (re-search-forward "^(defun" nil t)
21381 (setq lengths-list
21382 (cons (count-words-in-defun) lengths-list)))
21383 (kill-buffer buffer)
21384 lengths-list)))
21385@end group
21386@end smallexample
21387
21388@smallexample
21389@group
21390(defun lengths-list-many-files (list-of-files)
21391 "Return list of lengths of defuns in LIST-OF-FILES."
21392 (let (lengths-list)
21393;;; @r{true-or-false-test}
21394 (while list-of-files
21395 (setq lengths-list
21396 (append
21397 lengths-list
21398@end group
21399@group
21400;;; @r{Generate a lengths' list.}
21401 (lengths-list-file
21402 (expand-file-name (car list-of-files)))))
21403;;; @r{Make files' list shorter.}
21404 (setq list-of-files (cdr list-of-files)))
21405;;; @r{Return final value of lengths' list.}
21406 lengths-list))
21407@end group
21408@end smallexample
21409
21410@smallexample
21411@group
21412(defun defuns-per-range (sorted-lengths top-of-ranges)
21413 "SORTED-LENGTHS defuns in each TOP-OF-RANGES range."
21414 (let ((top-of-range (car top-of-ranges))
21415 (number-within-range 0)
21416 defuns-per-range-list)
21417@end group
21418
21419@group
21420 ;; @r{Outer loop.}
21421 (while top-of-ranges
21422
21423 ;; @r{Inner loop.}
21424 (while (and
21425 ;; @r{Need number for numeric test.}
21426 (car sorted-lengths)
21427 (< (car sorted-lengths) top-of-range))
21428
21429 ;; @r{Count number of definitions within current range.}
21430 (setq number-within-range (1+ number-within-range))
21431 (setq sorted-lengths (cdr sorted-lengths)))
21432@end group
21433
21434@group
21435 ;; @r{Exit inner loop but remain within outer loop.}
21436
21437 (setq defuns-per-range-list
21438 (cons number-within-range defuns-per-range-list))
21439 (setq number-within-range 0) ; @r{Reset count to zero.}
21440
21441 ;; @r{Move to next range.}
21442 (setq top-of-ranges (cdr top-of-ranges))
21443 ;; @r{Specify next top of range value.}
21444 (setq top-of-range (car top-of-ranges)))
21445@end group
21446
21447@group
21448 ;; @r{Exit outer loop and count the number of defuns larger than}
21449 ;; @r{ the largest top-of-range value.}
21450 (setq defuns-per-range-list
21451 (cons
21452 (length sorted-lengths)
21453 defuns-per-range-list))
21454
21455 ;; @r{Return a list of the number of definitions within each range,}
21456 ;; @r{ smallest to largest.}
21457 (nreverse defuns-per-range-list)))
21458@end group
21459@end smallexample
21460
21461@smallexample
21462@group
21463(defun column-of-graph (max-graph-height actual-height)
21464 "Return list of MAX-GRAPH-HEIGHT strings;
21465ACTUAL-HEIGHT are graph-symbols.
21466The graph-symbols are contiguous entries at the end
21467of the list.
21468The list will be inserted as one column of a graph.
21469The strings are either graph-blank or graph-symbol."
21470@end group
21471
21472@group
21473 (let ((insert-list nil)
21474 (number-of-top-blanks
21475 (- max-graph-height actual-height)))
21476
21477 ;; @r{Fill in @code{graph-symbols}.}
21478 (while (> actual-height 0)
21479 (setq insert-list (cons graph-symbol insert-list))
21480 (setq actual-height (1- actual-height)))
21481@end group
21482
21483@group
21484 ;; @r{Fill in @code{graph-blanks}.}
21485 (while (> number-of-top-blanks 0)
21486 (setq insert-list (cons graph-blank insert-list))
21487 (setq number-of-top-blanks
21488 (1- number-of-top-blanks)))
21489
21490 ;; @r{Return whole list.}
21491 insert-list))
21492@end group
21493@end smallexample
21494
21495@smallexample
21496@group
21497(defun Y-axis-element (number full-Y-label-width)
21498 "Construct a NUMBERed label element.
21499A numbered element looks like this ` 5 - ',
21500and is padded as needed so all line up with
21501the element for the largest number."
21502@end group
21503@group
21504 (let* ((leading-spaces
21505 (- full-Y-label-width
21506 (length
21507 (concat (number-to-string number)
21508 Y-axis-tic)))))
21509@end group
21510@group
21511 (concat
21512 (make-string leading-spaces ? )
21513 (number-to-string number)
21514 Y-axis-tic)))
21515@end group
21516@end smallexample
21517
21518@smallexample
21519@group
21520(defun print-Y-axis
21521 (height full-Y-label-width &optional vertical-step)
21522 "Insert Y axis by HEIGHT and FULL-Y-LABEL-WIDTH.
21523Height must be the maximum height of the graph.
21524Full width is the width of the highest label element.
21525Optionally, print according to VERTICAL-STEP."
21526@end group
21527@group
21528;; Value of height and full-Y-label-width
21529;; are passed by `print-graph'.
21530 (let ((start (point)))
21531 (insert-rectangle
21532 (Y-axis-column height full-Y-label-width vertical-step))
21533@end group
21534@group
21535 ;; @r{Place point ready for inserting graph.}
21536 (goto-char start)
21537 ;; @r{Move point forward by value of} full-Y-label-width
21538 (forward-char full-Y-label-width)))
21539@end group
21540@end smallexample
21541
21542@smallexample
21543@group
21544(defun print-X-axis-tic-line
21545 (number-of-X-tics X-axis-leading-spaces X-axis-tic-element)
21546 "Print ticks for X axis."
21547 (insert X-axis-leading-spaces)
21548 (insert X-axis-tic-symbol) ; @r{Under first column.}
21549@end group
21550@group
21551 ;; @r{Insert second tic in the right spot.}
21552 (insert (concat
21553 (make-string
21554 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
21555 ;; @r{Insert white space up to second tic symbol.}
21556 (* 2 (length X-axis-tic-symbol)))
21557 ? )
21558 X-axis-tic-symbol))
21559@end group
21560@group
21561 ;; @r{Insert remaining ticks.}
21562 (while (> number-of-X-tics 1)
21563 (insert X-axis-tic-element)
21564 (setq number-of-X-tics (1- number-of-X-tics))))
21565@end group
21566@end smallexample
21567
21568@smallexample
21569@group
21570(defun X-axis-element (number)
21571 "Construct a numbered X axis element."
21572 (let ((leading-spaces
21573 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
21574 (length (number-to-string number)))))
21575 (concat (make-string leading-spaces ? )
21576 (number-to-string number))))
21577@end group
21578@end smallexample
21579
21580@smallexample
21581@group
21582(defun graph-body-print (numbers-list height symbol-width)
21583 "Print a bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
21584The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values.
21585HEIGHT is maximum height of graph.
21586SYMBOL-WIDTH is number of each column."
21587@end group
21588@group
21589 (let (from-position)
21590 (while numbers-list
21591 (setq from-position (point))
21592 (insert-rectangle
21593 (column-of-graph height (car numbers-list)))
21594 (goto-char from-position)
21595 (forward-char symbol-width)
21596@end group
21597@group
21598 ;; @r{Draw graph column by column.}
21599 (sit-for 0)
21600 (setq numbers-list (cdr numbers-list)))
21601 ;; @r{Place point for X axis labels.}
21602 (forward-line height)
21603 (insert "\n")))
21604@end group
21605@end smallexample
21606
21607@smallexample
21608@group
21609(defun Y-axis-column
21610 (height width-of-label &optional vertical-step)
21611 "Construct list of labels for Y axis.
21612HEIGHT is maximum height of graph.
21613WIDTH-OF-LABEL is maximum width of label.
21614@end group
21615@group
21616VERTICAL-STEP, an option, is a positive integer
21617that specifies how much a Y axis label increments
21618for each line. For example, a step of 5 means
21619that each line is five units of the graph."
21620 (let (Y-axis
21621 (number-per-line (or vertical-step 1)))
21622@end group
21623@group
21624 (while (> height 1)
21625 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
21626 ;; @r{Insert label.}
21627 (setq Y-axis
21628 (cons
21629 (Y-axis-element
21630 (* height number-per-line)
21631 width-of-label)
21632 Y-axis))
21633@end group
21634@group
21635 ;; @r{Else, insert blanks.}
21636 (setq Y-axis
21637 (cons
21638 (make-string width-of-label ? )
21639 Y-axis)))
21640 (setq height (1- height)))
21641@end group
21642@group
21643 ;; @r{Insert base line.}
21644 (setq Y-axis (cons (Y-axis-element
21645 (or vertical-step 1)
21646 width-of-label)
21647 Y-axis))
21648 (nreverse Y-axis)))
21649@end group
21650@end smallexample
21651
21652@smallexample
21653@group
21654(defun print-X-axis-numbered-line
21655 (number-of-X-tics X-axis-leading-spaces
21656 &optional horizontal-step)
21657 "Print line of X-axis numbers"
21658 (let ((number X-axis-label-spacing)
21659 (horizontal-step (or horizontal-step 1)))
21660@end group
21661@group
21662 (insert X-axis-leading-spaces)
21663 ;; line up number
21664 (delete-char (- (1- (length (number-to-string horizontal-step)))))
21665 (insert (concat
21666 (make-string
21667 ;; @r{Insert white space up to next number.}
21668 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
21669 (1- (length (number-to-string horizontal-step)))
21670 2)
21671 ? )
21672 (number-to-string (* number horizontal-step))))
21673@end group
21674@group
21675 ;; @r{Insert remaining numbers.}
21676 (setq number (+ number X-axis-label-spacing))
21677 (while (> number-of-X-tics 1)
21678 (insert (X-axis-element (* number horizontal-step)))
21679 (setq number (+ number X-axis-label-spacing))
21680 (setq number-of-X-tics (1- number-of-X-tics)))))
21681@end group
21682@end smallexample
21683
21684@smallexample
21685@group
21686(defun print-X-axis (numbers-list horizontal-step)
21687 "Print X axis labels to length of NUMBERS-LIST.
21688Optionally, HORIZONTAL-STEP, a positive integer,
21689specifies how much an X axis label increments for
21690each column."
21691@end group
21692@group
21693;; Value of symbol-width and full-Y-label-width
21694;; are passed by `print-graph'.
21695 (let* ((leading-spaces
21696 (make-string full-Y-label-width ? ))
21697 ;; symbol-width @r{is provided by} graph-body-print
21698 (tic-width (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing))
21699 (X-length (length numbers-list))
21700@end group
21701@group
21702 (X-tic
21703 (concat
21704 (make-string
21705 ;; @r{Make a string of blanks.}
21706 (- (* symbol-width X-axis-label-spacing)
21707 (length X-axis-tic-symbol))
21708 ? )
21709@end group
21710@group
21711 ;; @r{Concatenate blanks with tic symbol.}
21712 X-axis-tic-symbol))
21713 (tic-number
21714 (if (zerop (% X-length tic-width))
21715 (/ X-length tic-width)
21716 (1+ (/ X-length tic-width)))))
21717@end group
21718
21719@group
21720 (print-X-axis-tic-line
21721 tic-number leading-spaces X-tic)
21722 (insert "\n")
21723 (print-X-axis-numbered-line
21724 tic-number leading-spaces horizontal-step)))
21725@end group
21726@end smallexample
21727
21728@smallexample
21729@group
21730(defun one-fiftieth (full-range)
21731 "Return list, each number of which is 1/50th previous."
d1069532 21732 (mapcar (lambda (arg) (/ arg 50)) full-range))
8cda6f8f
GM
21733@end group
21734@end smallexample
21735
21736@smallexample
21737@group
21738(defun print-graph
21739 (numbers-list &optional vertical-step horizontal-step)
09e80d9f 21740 "Print labeled bar graph of the NUMBERS-LIST.
8cda6f8f
GM
21741The numbers-list consists of the Y-axis values.
21742@end group
21743
21744@group
21745Optionally, VERTICAL-STEP, a positive integer,
21746specifies how much a Y axis label increments for
21747each line. For example, a step of 5 means that
21748each row is five units.
21749@end group
21750
21751@group
21752Optionally, HORIZONTAL-STEP, a positive integer,
21753specifies how much an X axis label increments for
21754each column."
21755 (let* ((symbol-width (length graph-blank))
21756 ;; @code{height} @r{is both the largest number}
21757 ;; @r{and the number with the most digits.}
21758 (height (apply 'max numbers-list))
21759@end group
21760@group
21761 (height-of-top-line
21762 (if (zerop (% height Y-axis-label-spacing))
21763 height
21764 ;; @r{else}
21765 (* (1+ (/ height Y-axis-label-spacing))
21766 Y-axis-label-spacing)))
21767@end group
21768@group
21769 (vertical-step (or vertical-step 1))
21770 (full-Y-label-width
21771 (length
21772 (concat
21773 (number-to-string
21774 (* height-of-top-line vertical-step))
21775 Y-axis-tic))))
21776@end group
21777@group
21778
21779 (print-Y-axis
21780 height-of-top-line full-Y-label-width vertical-step)
21781 (graph-body-print
21782 numbers-list height-of-top-line symbol-width)
21783 (print-X-axis numbers-list horizontal-step)))
21784@end group
21785@end smallexample
21786@c qqq
21787@end ignore
21788
21789@page
d6adf7e7 21790@node Final printed graph
8cda6f8f
GM
21791@appendixsubsec The Printed Graph
21792
21793When made and installed, you can call the @code{print-graph} command
21794like this:
21795@sp 1
21796
21797@smallexample
21798@group
21799(print-graph fiftieth-list-for-graph 50 10)
21800@end group
21801@end smallexample
21802@sp 1
21803
21804@noindent
21805Here is the graph:
21806@sp 2
21807
21808@smallexample
21809@group
218101000 - *
21811 **
21812 **
21813 **
21814 **
21815 750 - ***
21816 ***
21817 ***
21818 ***
21819 ****
21820 500 - *****
21821 ******
21822 ******
21823 ******
21824 *******
21825 250 - ********
21826 ********* *
21827 *********** *
21828 ************* *
21829 50 - ***************** * *
21830 | | | | | | | |
21831 10 50 100 150 200 250 300 350
21832@end group
21833@end smallexample
21834
21835@sp 2
21836
21837@noindent
f99f1641 21838The largest group of functions contain 10--19 words and symbols each.
8cda6f8f 21839
d6adf7e7 21840@node Free Software and Free Manuals
8cda6f8f
GM
21841@appendix Free Software and Free Manuals
21842
21843@strong{by Richard M. Stallman}
21844@sp 1
21845
21846The biggest deficiency in free operating systems is not in the
21847software---it is the lack of good free manuals that we can include in
21848these systems. Many of our most important programs do not come with
21849full manuals. Documentation is an essential part of any software
21850package; when an important free software package does not come with a
21851free manual, that is a major gap. We have many such gaps today.
21852
21853Once upon a time, many years ago, I thought I would learn Perl. I got
21854a copy of a free manual, but I found it hard to read. When I asked
21855Perl users about alternatives, they told me that there were better
21856introductory manuals---but those were not free.
21857
21858Why was this? The authors of the good manuals had written them for
21859O'Reilly Associates, which published them with restrictive terms---no
21860copying, no modification, source files not available---which exclude
21861them from the free software community.
21862
21863That wasn't the first time this sort of thing has happened, and (to
21864our community's great loss) it was far from the last. Proprietary
21865manual publishers have enticed a great many authors to restrict their
21866manuals since then. Many times I have heard a GNU user eagerly tell me
21867about a manual that he is writing, with which he expects to help the
21868GNU project---and then had my hopes dashed, as he proceeded to explain
21869that he had signed a contract with a publisher that would restrict it
21870so that we cannot use it.
21871
21872Given that writing good English is a rare skill among programmers, we
21873can ill afford to lose manuals this way.
21874
8cda6f8f
GM
21875Free documentation, like free software, is a matter of freedom, not
21876price. The problem with these manuals was not that O'Reilly Associates
31b62755
GM
21877charged a price for printed copies---that in itself is fine. The Free
21878Software Foundation @uref{http://shop.fsf.org, sells printed copies} of
21879free @uref{http://www.gnu.org/doc/doc.html, GNU manuals}, too.
8cda6f8f
GM
21880But GNU manuals are available in source code form, while these manuals
21881are available only on paper. GNU manuals come with permission to copy
21882and modify; the Perl manuals do not. These restrictions are the
21883problems.
21884
21885The criterion for a free manual is pretty much the same as for free
21886software: it is a matter of giving all users certain
21887freedoms. Redistribution (including commercial redistribution) must be
21888permitted, so that the manual can accompany every copy of the program,
21889on-line or on paper. Permission for modification is crucial too.
21890
21891As a general rule, I don't believe that it is essential for people to
21892have permission to modify all sorts of articles and books. The issues
21893for writings are not necessarily the same as those for software. For
21894example, I don't think you or I are obliged to give permission to
21895modify articles like this one, which describe our actions and our
21896views.
21897
21898But there is a particular reason why the freedom to modify is crucial
21899for documentation for free software. When people exercise their right
21900to modify the software, and add or change its features, if they are
21901conscientious they will change the manual too---so they can provide
21902accurate and usable documentation with the modified program. A manual
21903which forbids programmers to be conscientious and finish the job, or
21904more precisely requires them to write a new manual from scratch if
21905they change the program, does not fill our community's needs.
21906
21907While a blanket prohibition on modification is unacceptable, some
21908kinds of limits on the method of modification pose no problem. For
21909example, requirements to preserve the original author's copyright
21910notice, the distribution terms, or the list of authors, are ok. It is
21911also no problem to require modified versions to include notice that
21912they were modified, even to have entire sections that may not be
21913deleted or changed, as long as these sections deal with nontechnical
21914topics. (Some GNU manuals have them.)
21915
21916These kinds of restrictions are not a problem because, as a practical
21917matter, they don't stop the conscientious programmer from adapting the
21918manual to fit the modified program. In other words, they don't block
21919the free software community from making full use of the manual.
21920
21921However, it must be possible to modify all the technical content of
21922the manual, and then distribute the result in all the usual media,
21923through all the usual channels; otherwise, the restrictions do block
21924the community, the manual is not free, and so we need another manual.
21925
21926Unfortunately, it is often hard to find someone to write another
21927manual when a proprietary manual exists. The obstacle is that many
21928users think that a proprietary manual is good enough---so they don't
21929see the need to write a free manual. They do not see that the free
21930operating system has a gap that needs filling.
21931
21932Why do users think that proprietary manuals are good enough? Some have
21933not considered the issue. I hope this article will do something to
21934change that.
21935
21936Other users consider proprietary manuals acceptable for the same
21937reason so many people consider proprietary software acceptable: they
21938judge in purely practical terms, not using freedom as a
21939criterion. These people are entitled to their opinions, but since
21940those opinions spring from values which do not include freedom, they
21941are no guide for those of us who do value freedom.
21942
21943Please spread the word about this issue. We continue to lose manuals
21944to proprietary publishing. If we spread the word that proprietary
21945manuals are not sufficient, perhaps the next person who wants to help
21946GNU by writing documentation will realize, before it is too late, that
21947he must above all make it free.
21948
21949We can also encourage commercial publishers to sell free, copylefted
21950manuals instead of proprietary ones. One way you can help this is to
21951check the distribution terms of a manual before you buy it, and prefer
21952copylefted manuals to non-copylefted ones.
21953
21954@sp 2
21955@noindent
21956Note: The Free Software Foundation maintains a page on its Web site
21957that lists free books available from other publishers:@*
21958@uref{http://www.gnu.org/doc/other-free-books.html}
21959
d6adf7e7 21960@node GNU Free Documentation License
8cda6f8f
GM
21961@appendix GNU Free Documentation License
21962
21963@cindex FDL, GNU Free Documentation License
e41dfb1e 21964@include doclicense.texi
8cda6f8f 21965
d6adf7e7 21966@node Index
8cda6f8f
GM
21967@unnumbered Index
21968
21969@ignore
21970MENU ENTRY: NODE NAME.
21971@end ignore
21972
21973@printindex cp
21974
21975@iftex
21976@c Place biographical information on right-hand (verso) page
21977
21978@tex
a9097c6d 21979\par\vfill\supereject
8cda6f8f 21980\ifodd\pageno
8cda6f8f
GM
21981 \global\evenheadline={\hfil} \global\evenfootline={\hfil}
21982 \global\oddheadline={\hfil} \global\oddfootline={\hfil}
a9097c6d 21983 %\page\hbox{}\page
8cda6f8f 21984\else
a9097c6d 21985% \par\vfill\supereject
8cda6f8f
GM
21986 \global\evenheadline={\hfil} \global\evenfootline={\hfil}
21987 \global\oddheadline={\hfil} \global\oddfootline={\hfil}
a9097c6d
KB
21988 %\page\hbox{}%\page
21989 %\page\hbox{}%\page
8cda6f8f
GM
21990\fi
21991@end tex
21992
a9097c6d 21993@c page
8cda6f8f
GM
21994@w{ }
21995
21996@c ================ Biographical information ================
21997
21998@w{ }
21999@sp 8
22000@center About the Author
22001@sp 1
22002@end iftex
22003
22004@ifnottex
d6adf7e7 22005@node About the Author
8cda6f8f
GM
22006@unnumbered About the Author
22007@end ifnottex
22008
22009@quotation
22010Robert J. Chassell has worked with GNU Emacs since 1985. He writes
22011and edits, teaches Emacs and Emacs Lisp, and speaks throughout the
22012world on software freedom. Chassell was a founding Director and
22013Treasurer of the Free Software Foundation, Inc. He is co-author of
22014the @cite{Texinfo} manual, and has edited more than a dozen other
22015books. He graduated from Cambridge University, in England. He has an
22016abiding interest in social and economic history and flies his own
22017airplane.
22018@end quotation
22019
a9097c6d
KB
22020@c @page
22021@c @w{ }
22022@c
22023@c @c Prevent page number on blank verso, so eject it first.
22024@c @tex
22025@c \par\vfill\supereject
22026@c @end tex
22027
22028@c @iftex
22029@c @headings off
22030@c @evenheading @thispage @| @| @thistitle
22031@c @oddheading @| @| @thispage
22032@c @end iftex
8cda6f8f
GM
22033
22034@bye